Covers the rise of AI as an interpretive and operational layer for the electric system. These articles focus on grid intelligence, operator support, software-defined control, delegated judgment, utility AI fluency, governance, and the transition from automation to cognition.
The grid is shifting from hardware-based control to software-defined systems. AI, electrification, and distributed energy are driving this change, introducing new risks and requiring integrated, adaptive control across sensing, communication, and computation layers.
Brandon Owens