Choose your region and language

Go

Menu

Substation Automation and Grid Digitalization: Why the Energy Transition Depends on a Smarter Grid

Blog Post | 09.04.2026 | 8 min read

How substation automation, distribution automation, and IEC 61850 are enabling grid digitalization and the energy transition. Insights from the Power Pulse podcast.

More generation capacity alone will not deliver the energy transition. The missing piece is grid intelligence — and at the heart of that intelligence is automation. Substation automation, distribution automation, and the communication networks that connect them are the operational backbone that determines whether renewable energy reaches consumers reliably, efficiently, and safely.

That is the case Thibault makes in the latest episode of our podcast — and it is worth unpacking in full, because the stakes are higher than they might first appear.

Why the Grid Was Designed for One-Way Traffic — and Why That No Longer Works

The electricity network was designed around a simple design principle; power flows in one direction. This is where large, centralized plants generate power at scale, and then consumers draw from the grid. Substations were engineered around that logic. Protection systems were calibrated for it. Operational processes were built on top of it.

None of those assumptions hold today — and the pace at which they are breaking down is accelerating.

Global electricity demand surged by 4.3% in 2024, the largest increase ever recorded outside of post-recession rebounds (IEA, Electricity 2025) . To put that in perspective, the rise in consumption was larger than Japan’s entire annual electricity use. By 2030, renewables are on course to supply almost 45% of global electricity, up from 32% today (IEA, Renewables 2024) — requiring the addition of roughly 4,600 GW of new capacity over five years, the equivalent of the entire installed generation of China, the EU, and Japan combined.

What does not scale alongside that generation is the grid's ability to manage it at the scale and speed needed. Rooftop solar injects power back into distribution networks. Battery storage charges and discharges based on price signals. EV charging introduces demand spikes that are localized and hard to predict. Offshore wind connects via long subsea cables with characteristics that conventional protection systems were never designed to handle. The grid is now bidirectional, distributed, and dynamic — and its automation layer must reflect that reality. 

Substation Automation: From Reactive to Predictive

The substation is where the grid's intelligence starts — or, in legacy networks, where its limitations become most visible.

Traditional substations were built with electromechanical relays and copper wiring to connect field equipment to control systems. These provided limited visibility, required manual intervention for many switching operations, and offered no real-time insight into equipment condition. Faults were responded to after the fact. Maintenance ran on fixed schedules rather than actual asset health.

Modern substation automation replaces that with Intelligent Electronic Devices — IEDs — that monitor conditions continuously, execute protection functions at speed, and communicate across digital networks. The shift from copper wiring to a digital process bus using the IEC 61850 standard consolidates thousands of point-to-point connections into a single communication architecture, reducing wiring requirements by up to 80% and control room footprint by as much as 60%.

The more consequential change, though, is operational. Substation automation gives operators continuous visibility into power flows, equipment status, and fault signatures — rather than a snapshot taken after something has already gone wrong. That visibility is the foundation for predictive maintenance, AI-assisted analytics, and the kind of proactive grid management the energy transition requires. Global investment in grid digitalization reflects this: it is projected to nearly double from $81 billion in 2024 to $152 billion by 2030 (IEA, Electricity Grids and Secure Energy Transitions, 2023) . 

There is also a safety dimension that is easy to understate. Energized copper wiring in legacy substations represents a genuine risk. Replacing it with a fiber-optic process bus eliminates that hazard entirely — a practical benefit that compounds over the life of every asset.

Distribution Automation: Where Consumers Feel the Transition Most

If transmission is where large volumes of power move across regions, distribution is where the energy transition becomes personal. It is the part of the network closest to homes, businesses, EV charging points, and rooftop solar panels. It is also the part of the grid least equipped to handle all that is being asked of it.

Distribution networks were built for a passive, one-directional world. That model is now obsolete. Variable renewables — wind and solar combined — are expected to generate nearly 30% of global electricity by 2030, roughly double today’s level (IEA, Renewables 2024) . Much of that connects at the distribution level, where most new renewable links land and where EV and heat pump demand is growing fastest. A suburban street with households adding rooftop solar and EV chargers can create conditions that stress local infrastructure in ways the original design never anticipated.

The rapid growth of data centers compounds this further. Unlike EV demand, which is dispersed across millions of users, data center demand clusters geographically and scales rapidly. In several regional markets, projected data center growth is already approaching the total of all new generation capacity expected to come online over the same period — creating acute pressure on specific parts of the network that cannot be resolved through generation investment alone.

Distribution automation addresses this by giving operators the tools to see and manage those conditions in real time. Smart sensors and automated switching equipment detect congestion, reroute power flows, and restore supply after faults faster than any manual intervention could achieve. And as more distributed resources connect, automation provides the coordination layer that prevents local imbalances from cascading into wider network problems. Without this visibility, distribution networks become the weakest link in a grid that is otherwise being upgraded rapidly. 

Communication Networks: The Connective Tissue

Substation and distribution automation do not operate in isolation. Their value depends entirely on the critical communication infrastructure connecting them — to each other, to control centers, and to the growing ecosystem of distributed resources feeding into and drawing from the grid.

IEC 61850 has become the defining standard for grid communication precisely because it enables interoperability at scale. It allows equipment from multiple vendors to exchange data across a common protocol, replacing fragmented proprietary architectures that made legacy substations difficult to manage and expensive to upgrade. The multi-vendor advantage of 61850 means operators are not locked into a single supplier ecosystem — a critical consideration as grids grow more complex and the need to integrate new technologies accelerates.

The communication layer also determines the speed at which protection systems respond. In high-voltage environments, the difference between a fault being isolated in milliseconds versus seconds is the difference between contained damage and cascading failure. Digital communication across a process bus makes that speed achievable. Beyond protection, it enables the data flows that support remote diagnostics, advanced analytics, and the coordination of distributed energy resources. Governments have recognized this: the US has committed over $10.5 billion under its Grid Resilience and Innovation Partnerships program (US DOE, Grid Resilience and Innovation Partnerships Program) , while Europe has earmarked $184 billion in digital grid investment through 2030 (European Commission, REPowerEU / Grid Action Plan).

A Problem That Needed a Better Solution

One of the clearest illustrations of what grid automation makes possible — and what its absence costs — is offshore wind cable protection.

Long subsea cables connecting offshore generation to the onshore grid behave like large capacitors. They generate high charging currents and produce complex transient signals during switching events. Conventional differential protection systems struggle to distinguish these normal operating characteristics from genuine fault conditions. The historical workaround was blunt: reduce protection sensitivity to avoid nuisance trips, accepting that real faults might go undetected for longer — or accept more frequent unnecessary outages that erode the reliability of offshore generation.

Neither is an acceptable trade-off when cable replacement costs run into hundreds of millions and offshore access is constrained by weather and logistics.

Adaptive model-based differential protection changes the equation. By combining detailed system models with real-time measurements, it can accurately distinguish cable charging behavior and switching transients from genuine faults. Unnecessary outages are reduced. Equipment is protected at appropriate sensitivity levels. The reliability of offshore wind improves. It is a targeted innovation, but one with material consequences for how dependably offshore generation performs at scale

Grid Digitalization Is Not Optional: More Generation Alone Won’t Close the Flexibility Gap

Growing curtailment levels and surging hours of negative electricity prices in markets with high renewable penetration are already clear signals of a flexibility gap — a mismatch between when power is generated and when it can be used or stored. That gap is not solved by adding more generation. It is solved by making the grid smarter.

Substation automation, distribution automation, and the communication networks that tie them together are not supporting infrastructure for the energy transition — they are enabling infrastructure. Without them, generation capacity cannot be integrated reliably. Without them, the flexibility needed to balance variable supply and dynamic demand does not exist. Without them, operators are left reacting to problems they cannot see coming.

The ambition is clear. The technology exists. The question is whether the intelligence layer keeps pace.

Listen to the episode

Thibault goes deeper on all of this in our latest podcast episode — covering how digital substations are being deployed in practice, what distribution automation looks like on the ground, how IEC 61850 is reshaping interoperability across the grid, and what the adaptive model-based differential protection reveals about the technical frontier ahead. If the infrastructure layer of the energy transition is part of your world, this conversation is worth your time.