Operational resilience is a water utility’s capacity to anticipate and react to change not only to survive, but to evolve. It is important today because the business environment in the water industry is becoming more dynamic and unpredictable. This is a result of several enduring forces disrupting business systems – from accelerated technological evolution to a greater interconnectedness of the global economy to broader issues, such as rising inequality and climate change.
In addition, operational resilience compliments efforts related to Environment, Social and Governance (ESG) which includes committing to decarbonising a utility’s footprint and to explore ways to power operations with carbon pollution-free energy sources. This commitment is critical to combating the changing client, and it’s crucial that utilities pursue this path in a way that advances equity and environmental justice. For generations, the harmful impacts of toxic pollution and climate change have been disproportionately felt by low-income communities and communities of colour. Today, utilities are working to change that by ensuring investments in infrastructure that doesn’t leave disadvantaged and historically marginalised communities behind.
Having an effective operational resilience plan and framework, along with connecting efforts to ESG and environmental justice, means a utility has the processes in place to identify physical, economic, cyber and other risks. By putting in controls to reduce those risks, and where these fail to eliminate risk, organisations have the flexibility and processes in place to adapt to any change in conditions. This will ensure normal business operations can continue and suffer minimum or no impact.
Utilities that want to build resilience first need to establish full visibility across the supply chain, systems and networks. Such visibility enables robust end-to-end planning and management, and makes it easier to rapidly assess the impacts of potential disruptions. When municipalities understand the conditions of their systems, they can optimise their assets by predicting, and preventing or mitigating, system issues. For example, GHD Digital’s approach leverages machine learning to detect hidden patterns in data and accurately predicts the likelihood of failure for a pipe within a distribution network. Resulting in increased accuracy and better maintenance decisions, thus reducing non-revenue water in the system as well as avoiding catastrophic breaks.
Operational resilience requires utilities to adapt to these challenging times. The introduction of digital tools not only helps system operators fully see their physical networks, but also makes real-time decisions faster.