Utility providers have a difficult line to tread between managing customer expectations on cost and service, against investing in future-focused infrastructure resilience. When they get it right, it is rare that they get praised. Yet, when a crisis occurs, they can be the first to be blamed by consumers.

There are water shocks and stresses in many cities globally and power outages happen consistently in many countries though rarely in the developed world. With the UK’s unexpected power outage on 9 August 2019, and the context of Cape Town’s water crisis setting the scene for The Resilience Shift’s work on urban water resilience, it seemed timely to bring together guests from across the utilities sector to share lessons in good resilience practice.

The focus of the event was to build understanding of the interdependency of systems and to share best practice that could inform the discussion about how best to build infrastructure resilience. Guests represented regulatory bodies, utilities operators and asset owners for water, power, as well as regulators, resilience specialists and other interested parties.

The Resilience Shift in partnership with Resilience First brought together a panel comprising: Min Zhu, Deputy Director, Electricity Transmission, Systems and Networks at Ofgem; David Wright, Director, Electricity and Group Electricity Chief Engineer, National Grid; Richard Aylard, Sustainability Director, Thames Water; and Martin Shouler, Associate Director and London Water Leader at Arup (representing The Resilience Shift). The guest dinner speaker was Suleman Alli, Director of Strategy, UK Power Networks. After a welcome by Dr Juliet Mian, Technical Director at The Resilience Shift, the Chair of Resilience First, Simon Collins, introduced the panel and chaired the session. We share below some key insights from the discussion.

The need for more cross-sector coordination and collaboration

Collaboration was key for Min Zhu, both across sectors and with industry stakeholders. There are regulators’ fora where they share knowledge to tackle challenges such as flooding, cyber and climate change but more needs to be done.

A systems approach is necessary to understand increasing complexity and interdependencies

David Wright discussed the increasing dependency on electricity which increases the impact of threats such as cyber. He also noted that the complexity of networks is growing – in 2011 there were 275 companies and in 2018 about 4,000 in the power sector in the UK. This complexity and fragmentation make it challenging to co-ordinate and understand the resilience of the network. A systems approach to resilience is the best way to understand the interdependencies between these providers and importance and impact of disruptions.

Increasing urban populations is also a challenge but the biggest threat, he stated, is climate change. He highlighted how electric utilities in the USA were prepared to switch off 1 million customers in California due to the risk of climate change-related wildfires (a subject covered in this Electric Utilities resilience primer). In the UK, he explained, they have learned lessons from the 2007 floods and now have permanent flood protection around substations.

Business case for prioritising investing in resilience measures

Richard Aylard was asked about the strategic responses to local water shortages and the prospect of serious droughts. He discussed how the changing climate will exacerbate this with less rainfall in summer and more in winter (see Potable Water resilience primer for more about these challenges for the water sector). Heavy rain is difficult to capture so contrary to the rest of us, Thames Water prefers constant drizzle! They are considering multiple solutions that include reducing leakage, demand management, meters, reducing sewage effluent, bringing water in from Thames valley via pipeline/canal, and a new reservoir. He noted that they needed all of these – but how should they prioritise?

This highlighted the need for evidence-based approaches to prioritisation and decision-making so that a clear business case for investment can be developed. This also raised the question around measuring the benefit of resilience.

Decision making is facilitated by the use of strategic tools such as the City Water Resilience Approach, supported by The Resilience Shift and applied in Cape Town and Greater Miami. Arup was a key partner in this and has been involved in the development of a number of other resilience frameworks such as the City Resilience Index developed with the Rockefeller Foundation, the Energy Resilience Framework, and specific resilience frameworks developed for Welsh Water 2050 and others. 

Importance of customer engagement and understanding

Martin Shouler added an international perspective to the discussion, sharing key resilience lessons learned in eight cities across the globe as part of the development of the City Water Resilience Approach. He highlighted one city, Cape Town, that faced a serious water crisis in 2017-18 with its 4 million people on the point of running out of water on ‘Day Zero’. Reflections from those involved in this crisis are now shared in these Day Zero Learning Resources.

Martin shared lessons around the power of citizen engagement – describing the “dirty shirt” campaign – not washing your clothes and wearing your dirty shirt as a badge of honour. The reduction in water usage averted the catastrophe and now citizens have maintained their reduced consumption as they have greater awareness and understanding of the issues and consequences they face. Martin noted that this reflects a maturing relationship between consumers and utilities and his two key learning points were the need for the citizen relationship, and the need to invest time in building your stakeholder relationships – before things go wrong.

Building a strong resilience culture

The event closed with wide ranging audience questions followed by discussion at a focused dinner event with guest speaker Suleman Alli, Director of Strategy at UK Power Networks. Suleman offered a fascinating insight on the way that company approached resilience. He highlighted five key attributes: interdependence, culture or mind-set, muscle memory, curiosity, and partnerships. He talked about a “generative culture” with clear values and vision.

Resilience First studied adaptive capacity as part of their airports project. UK Power Networks was surveyed as part of this and were extremely strong. This was attributed to the CEO’s (Basil Scarsella) leadership and the alignment and ownership instilled in the staff. This high adaptive capacity correlates with improved competitive advantage and higher productivity.

Finally, Seth Schultz, the new Global Executive Director of The Resilience Shift gave his initial thoughts on the direction that that organisation will be taking under his stewardship.

 

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