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What It Takes for Future-Ready Power Distribution

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Why This Matters

This article highlights the urgent need for utilities to modernize their distribution systems to meet future challenges. As demand patterns, weather events, and cybersecurity threats evolve, a proactive approach to grid resilience and automation becomes essential for reliable power delivery and customer satisfaction.

Key Takeaways

This sponsored article is brought to you by Black & Veatch.

The biggest challenge facing utilities today isn’t what it seems. It’s not demand, even as load growth accelerates. It’s not extreme weather, even as “major events” become routine. It’s not cybersecurity, even as connections expand across the grid.

Nick Lehnert, Associate Vice President, Distribution Grid Leader, Black & Veatch. Black & Veatch

The real challenge is this: Distribution systems were designed for a different reality.

Long gone are the days of predictable demand, one-way power flow and isolated disruptions. At Black & Veatch, we see that leading utilities are no longer debating whether to modernize. They’re deciding how quickly they can do it, and how to do it at scale.

Across grid modernization programs globally, three truths consistently emerge. They define what it takes to prepare the distribution system for what’s next:

1. Outage response is not a resilience strategy

Resilience is being redefined in real time. A strategy centered on mobilizing crews and restoring service as quickly as possible is reactive, and increasingly insufficient.

Resilience has to shift upstream into integrated system design. That starts with hardening. Stronger poles, undergrounding and structural upgrades all have a role, particularly in high-risk corridors. We’re also seeing meaningful gains from how the network is configured and how quickly it can respond without waiting on manual intervention.

This is where distribution automation programs can change outcomes. Strategically placed reclosers, automated switches and fault indicators help contain disruptions before they spread. When combined with feeder reconfiguration and updated protection strategies, distribution automation investments allow utilities to set more aggressive recovery targets and achieve measurable reductions in outage duration and customer impact.

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