Israel’s GridON Keeps the Midnight Oil Burning

lightening bolt grid gridonIt’s a fault current limiter to help large utility companies avert major power breakdowns.

I was sitting in the middle of an online boater’s exam back in Canada with my parents last week, when at question #18 the power went out. It stayed out all night, but was on before we woke up. A thunderbolt hit a power box near my cousin’s house on the other side of town (he saw the show) and the effects were widespread. Needless to say, we had to start the dreaded test over again a couple of days later. Thankfully it was done and my parents can drive their boats without worrying about getting a ticket.

We all know from experience that thunderstorms can cause power surges across the electricity grid causing massive blackouts. And a week before the blackout I’d just written about an Israeli company that hopes to address this need: Blackouts across the world now threaten to become more common as people’s power needs increase. High energy demands mixed with thunderstorms, solar storms, and the addition of renewables like solar and wind energy to the grid, creates an unpredictable mix of power variables infrastructure companies never had to deal with before. The Israeli company GridON may have a solution that a UK power company is now trying out.

Its device, the Keeper, is a three-phase fault current limiter based on intellectual property from Bar-Ilan University.

About the size of a heavy-duty fridge, the device instantaneously blocks current surges, and limits the current for as long as required to clear the fault. It recovers immediately thereafter, protecting against multiple faults occurring in quick succession.

Costing between $500,000 to $3.5 million, depending on voltage, the Keeper promises to avert a potential power breakdown.

Praised by General Electric

According to the company CEO Yoram Valent, GridON is already negotiating with major utilities companies around the world. In 2010, the five-person company based in Givatayim received an Innovation Award from General Electric’s Ecomagination Challenge.

Valent, co-founder of the company with Roy Iscovitsch and Matty Vengerik, tells ISRAEL21c: “When there is a short circuit on a high-voltage network, it can be a major catastrophe. This impacts the quality of service, destroys equipment, creates blackouts like in the East Coast in the US [in 2003], and costs billions to the economy.”

The Keeper, in development over the last eight years at the university and since 2009 in the company, “always guarantees if there is a short circuit that it will lift the current under the allowed rating. The main position is in the substation in a grid or in connection points of generators or generator stations – traditional or renewable energy ones,” says Valent.

Potential customers include any major power generator company, utilities and even factories that need a constant supply of power, he says, predicting in the next five years his company could sell multiple dozens of Keepers to a typical utility company. “The business plan calls for high-end sales of maybe hundreds, 200 or 300, to an average utility across several years.”

Good for Europe’s Grid

In Israel, the grid carries about 11 gigawatts of power over a condensed and small area, so the company projects its technology is better suited to countries in Europe, where solutions have been elusive.

This July, GridOn was chosen by the Energy Technologies Institute to test the Keeper on a large UK power network in Newhaven, East Sussex.

“There were a lot of activities in the past decade that didn’t result in commercial solutions,” says Valent. The proposed systems weren’t practical or economical since the companies tried using futuristic superconductive material, he relates. Utilities companies were afraid of banking on superconductors because the material tends to be unstable.

Instead, GridOn uses standard materials, such as copper. “We took the same innovation from the superconductive world and made it even more futuristic,” Valent says. “We show utilities something that works — no frightening new technology.”

According to the company, the Keeper not only provides grid reliability, but also safety and efficiency while extending life of existing infrastructure.

The manufacturing process is outsourced, while Wilson Transformer Company in Australia is a strategic partner and investor.

::GridON

Read more about grid clean tech from the Middle East:

CES Thinks Inside the Grid to Save Energy
Lebanon Looks to Smart Grid and Renewable Energy Technologies
Ten Clean Tech Companies from Israel Head to California, 2010

This story was first published on ISRAEL21c – www.israel21c.org.

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Karin Kloosterman
Author: Karin Kloosterman

Karin Kloosterman is an award-winning journalist and publisher that founded Green Prophet to unite a prosperous Middle East. She shows through her work that positive, inspiring dialogue creates action that impacts people, business and planet. She has published in thought-leading newspapers and magazines globally, owns an IoT tech chip patent, and is part of teams that build world-changing products to make agriculture and our planet more sustainable. Reach out directly to [email protected]

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