Exhibitions / Congresses

IntelliSub Europe 2013

Germany, Frankfurt - 26/11/2013 - 28/11/2013
IntelliSub Europe 2013 This 2nd annual conference, exhibition and networking forum brings together engineering and asset management professionals from across the European TSO and DSO landscape, for 3 days of case study reviews, in-depth discussions and high-impact networking around next generation smart substation deployments. The programme is divided into morning plenary sessions where cost-efficiency and security in the next phase of smart substation deployments will be addressed by technical strategists, and afternoon tracks where practical reviews of smart substation implementations will be given by technical experts. A highly focused exhibition of the latest systems and components for the smart substation will run alongside the conference, and the event will conclude with a practical workshop addressing GOOSE Messaging and Sampled Values.

Key topics for discussion include: smart substation investment planning; implementing IEC 61850; multi-vendor interoperability; achieving grid stability; capitalising on the process bus; grid monitoring and control; integrating DER, RES and EVs; component development; data management & analytics; grid communication advances; workforce transformation; future-proofing SCADA; asset lifecycle evolution; condition monitoring & asset health; measurement & calibration; network exploration & fault location; and advanced safety & maintenance, among others.
Date(s)
26/11/2013 - 28/11/2013
Venue
Movenpick Hotel
Ticketing
€1,495
Fact of the week
Bluetooth is named after the 10th-century Viking king, Harald Bluetooth, who united warring tribes in Denmark and Norway. In 1997, Jim Kardach from Intel gave the name to the technology because of its ability to unite different communication protocols, just as Harald united various tribes.
Morooka MFD20
Yokohama, Japan
Used - Sale
Toyota 02-8FD25
Yokohama, Japan
Used - Sale
Fact of the week
Bluetooth is named after the 10th-century Viking king, Harald Bluetooth, who united warring tribes in Denmark and Norway. In 1997, Jim Kardach from Intel gave the name to the technology because of its ability to unite different communication protocols, just as Harald united various tribes.
Fact of the week
Bluetooth is named after the 10th-century Viking king, Harald Bluetooth, who united warring tribes in Denmark and Norway. In 1997, Jim Kardach from Intel gave the name to the technology because of its ability to unite different communication protocols, just as Harald united various tribes.