When extreme weather hits Texas, the state’s power grid often struggles to keep up, leaving many Texans worried every time the forecast turns severe. An tech st
When extreme weather hits Texas, the state’s power grid often struggles to keep up, leaving many Texans worried every time the forecast turns severe. A tech startup with an Austin base says it has a way to make that grid smarter and more efficient.
Gridraven, led by CEO Georg Rute, focuses on a problem he says isn’t about not having enough power, but about not moving it efficiently to where people live and work. “The grid often has plenty of power available, but it’s just not reaching us,” Rute explained, noting that electricity can be available in places like West Texas but blocked from flowing into major population centers. Standing in front of a digital map of the transmission system, Rute points out that every high-voltage line is modeled in Gridraven’s software. The goal is to help grid operators see in real time how much electricity each line can safely carry.Gridraven’s system is purely software-based and uses what Rute calls extremely accurate, hyper-local weather predictions to calculate real-time “dynamic line ratings.” Transmission lines are made of metal, and Rute says they’re surprisingly sensitive to even light winds. A breeze of around four miles per hour can cool a line enough to roughly double how much power it can safely move compared with still air. When the wind cools the lines, their capacity goes up. When temperatures soar and winds die down, capacity drops. Instead of relying on conservative, static limits, Gridraven estimates what each line can handle at that exact moment, based on the specific weather conditions it is experiencing. Right now, grid operators often play it safe because they don’t know the true, real-time capacity of each transmission line. That can lead to lines being effectively underused or even taken out of service, creating artificial bottlenecks that choke the flow of power and drive up prices. Rute estimates that this kind of inefficiency costs Texans around $2 billion a year in congestion-related expenses across the state. He says that works out to roughly $200 a year per household, extra costs that show up on power bills because the grid can’t fully use the lines it already has.Rute named the company Gridraven after one of the world’s smartest birds. In many mythologies, ravens are seen as creatures that can see the future, and Rute says that fits the company’s mission: giving grid operators a clearer, almost predictive view of what’s really happening on their lines so they can make better decisions in real time.He believes this kind of “grid intelligence” can lower costs, reduce bottlenecks, and make more power available without waiting years for new transmission projects. That could be crucial as demand for electricity in Texas is expected to jump in the coming years, especially as energy-hungry data centers and other large facilities come online.A man was arrested after he allegedly shot an AR-15 at other vehicles in a Home Depot parking lot in Bastrop Wednesday afternoon, according to police. No injuriAustin police arrested a suspect in connection to Sunday's homicide near Mueller.APD says that 37-year-old Clemente Garcia was arrested on Tuesday in the 7100 bSeveral homes have been evacuated after a commercial vehicle crash in Manor Thursday morning.Manor police say officers are at the scene of the crash near the inPolice are asking for the public's help identifying two suspects wanted in connection with a robbery that occurred in an east Austin parking lot last month.TheA fire destroyed a storage building at a Leander bookstore late Wednesday, burning furniture, tools, books, and inventory just weeks before the store was set to
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