Revolution continues in Power Grid

Today in Joral Da Night
The Iberian blackout has clarified the complexity of power grid, rebounding the debate on fuel security and has attracted media attention to the revolution imposed by the integration of the renewable power on the network 100 years ago. Vera Silva is in the front row of this revolution. More than 5,000 engineers are leading in more than 100 countries today. “Portuguese Engineer and Global Revolution” is a great SIC report that you can see here.

20 years ago, Vera Silva exchanged his career as a teacher and researcher at the Institute of Engineering with Goran Strobak for the UK Doctorate, one of the world’s most respected names in the Electrical Systems region. I have always found the best way to convert the power grid to the gas and coal -driven power grid to suit the oscillations of the sun and air.
“Diversity is so high because the air and the sun will be constantly raised and reduced,” he explained that the full professor Goran Strabak in Imperial College explained: “So we need to analyze the demand and the demand and offer at all times. Her work is very early at this stage.”
Vera Silva has a name in this revolution in Power Grid, the largest and complex structure of humanity. An invisible revolution, on the future of the planet and with great effect on everything we do every day.
After two decades of investigation in defining European fuel transformation policies, EDF, Vera Silva, a public service of French electricity at Imperial College, London, is led by a group of over 5,000 engineers in over 100 countries.
The Portuguese engineer defines the paths of the Green Arm of North American Multination General Electric established by Thomas Edison in 1878. A year before the incandescent lamp and begin the electrification of the planet.
The lust on the electricity was born on a dam of Karapat in Doro. Grandpa, who built schools in the north of the country, led his granddaughter to find out the great work of engineering in 1972.
Technical file
Image Edition: Rui Berton
Editorial Product: Diana Matias
Colorist: Rui Bronchwinho
Post Production Audio: Edgar Keats
Coordinate: Miriam Alves
Direction: Martha Brito Dose Reis and Bernardo Ferro