DocumentCode :
936354
Title :
The economics of aging infrastructure
Author :
Brown, Richard E. ; Willis, H. Lee
Volume :
4
Issue :
3
fYear :
2006
Firstpage :
36
Lastpage :
43
Abstract :
Eventually, every system will age to a sustainable point at which repair and replacement costs driven by advanced equipment age and deterioration from long service will remain constant thereafter. The good news is that equipment data, condition assessment, prioritization, and management focus can significantly reduce costs, extend lifetimes, and improve reliability. The bad news is that even when optimized to the extent possible, in the long run, utilities will need more money in order to maintain their systems at the lowest life-cycle cost. Many regulatory agencies and customers will push back and insist that spending related to aging infrastructure be reasonably justified, but limiting a utility´s ability to manage its aging equipment will eventually result in lower levels of reliability and higher rates in the future
Keywords :
cost reduction; life cycle costing; maintenance engineering; power system reliability; advanced equipment age; aging equipment; aging infrastructure; condition assessment; cost reduction; equipment data; equipment reliability improvement; life-cycle cost; lifetime extension; repair costs; replacement costs; Aging; Costs; Electric breakdown; Electrical equipment industry; Medium voltage; Power cables; Power generation economics; Power industry; Power transformer insulation; Stress;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Power and Energy Magazine, IEEE
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1540-7977
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/MPAE.2006.1632452
Filename :
1632452
Link To Document :
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