New state-of-the-art digital grid lab and updated curriculum will prepare students for today’s new energy workforce
Siemens and Case Western Reserve University have formed a new academic partnership to provide students with the skills needed to operate and advance the nation’s energy grid. The power grid, faced with the growth of renewable energy and the threat of outages from extreme weather, is becoming more reliant than ever on intelligent, digital technologies to smoothly operate the country’s critical infrastructure. A new academic track will prepare students for this shifting energy landscape by providing them with both new classroom curriculum and hands-on learning via real-world software and hardware tools in a new state-of-the-art Digital Grid Lab. The total value of the partnership is about $1.2 million, including in-kind and monetary gifts. Siemens is working with the Case School of Engineering’s Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science to develop this experiential learning curriculum that will better educate students to address the needs of a 21st-century power grid. The new Siemens Digital Grid Lab was officially dedicated at 11 a.m. today and will give students hands-on experience with real-world digital grid software and hardware already hard at work at some of the largest utilities across the country. The training the students will receive in the living lab includes operating software that helps identify outages within milliseconds—so the grid can quickly recover from hurricanes or natural disasters—and managing an advanced distribution management system that can balance the addition of renewable generation like wind and solar power on the grid.

For more information, contact Mike Scott at mike.scott@case.edu.