UK water utility operating network section with AI
Utilities Digital Solutions Europe

UK water utility operating network section with AI

Monday, 22 October 2018

Digital solutions and their impact on human workforces

There is no doubting that digital technologies and the increased availability of artificial intelligence (AI) have piqued both interest and scepticism among water utilities.

A question facing many industries is how far can digital solutions go and what impact will they have on human workforces?

One UK utility is demonstrating that machine really is better than man, or woman, for certain tasks and has adopted a novel AI system to take over control centre responsibility on an existing, automated part of its drinking water network.

Technology demonstration

United Utilities (UU) has signed an eight-year framework agreement with Canadian start-up AI company, Emagin, to initially focus on drinking water with the potential to also address wastewater treatment.

"Machine learning is changing the way our industry builds digital twins… With machine learning, we can now leverage live data to build dynamic models that not only predict future conditions, but are self-correcting and significantly minimize manual overhead.”

Thouheed Abdul Gaffoor
CEO and co-founder of Emagin

This followed a demonstration site being set up in the OIdham District Metered Zone, selected due to its “remote control capabilities and high degree of instrumentation at sites”.

After a 12-week programme, Emagin and UU estimated that they generated 22 percent in cost savings, giving a “payback period of five months”.

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Collecting data from sources including flowmeters and SCADA systems, the AI platform generated real-time pump schedules, using Machine Learning to help the utility adapt its operations to choose the lowest cost option.

The utility said that the employees previously responsible for this task have been repositioned to spend “more time on human intervention and skilled work”.

Providing water and wastewater services for three million homes and 200,000 businesses, United Utilities signed the agreement following its flagship ‘Innovation Lab’ project: a ten-week “bootcamp” type initiative took place in Spring 2017. 

In total, 80 companies applied to take part with the list whittled down to seven suppliers in total. Following the ten weeks of the Innovation Lab, United Utilities then decided to continue working with four of those seven companies, including Emagin.

Kieran Brocklebank, head of innovation at United Utilities, said: “Emagin was the first company we’ve come across who have high technical skill in AI, which is a huge digital innovation trend, and also couples that with water industry experience.”

UK water utility operating network section with AI

Machine Learning

Thouheed Abdul Gaffoor, CEO and co-founder of Emagin, said: "Machine learning is changing the way our industry builds digital twins. Traditionally, we've relied on explicitly defined numerical models. These are hard-coded and require significant human intervention to maintain. 
“With machine learning, we can now leverage live data to build dynamic models that not only predict future conditions, but are self-correcting and significantly minimize manual overhead. This means the operational workforce of the future will be far more agile in responding to the challenges of the industry."

Another company to succeed from the Innovation Lab was UK pipe sensor company Datatecnics, which has secured a two-year trial with United Utilities.


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