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Believe it or not, EWPC is about teaching leadership. As “human beings are a lot more sensitive to their environment than they may seem,” I would like to learn from the bystanders whether EWPC has tipped or not in the Energy Central Network environment.

Does EWPC have a “Bystander Problem”?


By José Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio, Ph.D.

Systemic Consultant: Electricity

Copyright © 2007 José Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio. All rights reserved. No part of this article may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, without written permission from José Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio. This article is an unedited, an uncorrected, draft material of The EWPC Textbook. Please write to javs@ieee.org to contact the author for any kind of engagement.

In order to get support for EWPC, I wrote the now best selling Conspiracy Theory Against Mr. X (562 views, until Nov 22nd, 2007). So now I think is time to ask what that means in terms of leadership.

“The Tipping Point: how little things can make a big difference,” by Malcolm Gladwell, carries the story of Kitty Genovese, which I contend is similar to that of EWPC in Energy Central Network environment.

Gladwell tells that “… Kitty was chased by her assailant and attacked three times on the street, over the course of half an hour, as thirty-eight of her neighbors watch from the windows. During that time, however, none of the thirty-eight witnesses called the police.”

Two New York City psychologists, Bibb Latane and John Darley named the above situation the “bystander problem,” explaining that “when people are in a group… responsibility for acting is diffused. They assume that someone else will make the call, or they assume that because no one else is acting, the apparent problem… isn’t really a problem.”

In the case of EWPC, during the past two years Mr. G has attacked without mercy EWPC, and no one else have come with help, even though an inordinate amount of people have seen it.

Gladwell ends the brief story by saying that “human beings are a lot more sensitive to their environment than they may seem.”

This is a good test for EWPC now that it seems to have tipped in www.energyblogs.com with 6 of the 10 “Most Commented” and the top 6 and the 8th place of the 10 “Most Viewed” articles, but no one has firmly committed (Mr. Causey issued a nice comment) his/her support to EWPC.

I would like to learn from the bystander whether EWPC has tipped or not in the Energy Central Network environment. Believe it or not, EWPC is about teaching leadership.

member photo Len Gould on 11.23.07

So, Jose Antonio, if dissapointing support on that blog, will that mean we can hope for no more irrelevant promotions of EWPC / your consulting time on this site? Please? Promise to restrict mentions of EWPC to maximum 10 words once per article only if relevant, and I'll promise the same on IMEUC.
# Posted By Jose Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio | 11/23/07 7:39 AM | Report This Comment as Foul/Inappropriate
member photo Correction: nnly 5, no 6, of the "Most Commented" are EWPC articles.
# Posted By Jose Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio | 11/23/07 1:18 PM | Report This Comment as Foul/Inappropriate
member photo Dear Bill, Bob, and Len,

So far, more than 100 views are reported on this article and no comment other than Len Gould has been added. It seems that EWPC and this article (except for Bob and Len) have the bystander problem even after being viewed 1500 times.

On 11.23.07, above, I wrote that "I will show that the storage issue is very important to increase the efficiency of the use of energy and to make it less political."

Energy price formation is systemic. Systemic means it depends on system structure. The original Vertically Integrated Utilities paradigm system structure is what led to "...One big, no itemized ... bill [that] arrives in the mail at the end of each month."

Under the VIU system structure, demand was an externality. Now FERC is trying to integrate demand to power system planning, operation and control, to increase the efficiency of electricity use. This article treats the missing demand response (efficient rationing) part of FERC's staff assessment on article Demand Integration is NOT the Province of Politics (Please hit link )http://www.energyblogs.com/ewpc/index.cfm/2007/12/... here and further down to get more details). It explains how electricity without storage is made reliable, but still subject to rationing.

Energy prices increase as supply capacity reserves decrease at a given location. Short run supply vs. demand imbalances of gasoline are dealt by storage. Short run supply vs. demand imbalances of electricity are dealt by system reliability. Reliability is not cheap. The analogy of electricity to gasoline is thus incomplete, as reporting requirements of demand response need to integrated by retailers (regulated or unregulated) at the long run planning stage.

It is the need of system reliability that makes the need for Second Generation Retailer - 2GR (http://grupomillenium.blogspot.com/2007/07/second-...) to optimize customers' interdependent investments and to bridge the retail market with the wholesale market. Potential innovations, such as the Zigbee options board made by 4C Energy Solutions will have much more opportunities and sooner in the global market under EWPC than under todays slow political market architecture and design paradigm.

Reference and context: FERC Assesses Advanced Metering Programs (http://www.energypulse.net/centers/article/article... by Bill Opalka, Editor-in-Chief, Topic Centers, Energy Central
# Posted By Jose Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio | 12/6/07 3:13 PM | Report This Comment as Foul/Inappropriate
member photo In the section "using consumers as innovators," Manyika, Roberts and Sprague, in The McKinsey Quaterly article "Eight Business Technology Trends to watch," advise "... a company open to allowing customers to help it innovate must ensure that it isn't unduly influenced by information gleaned from a vocal minority."

EWPC is available for companies willing to innovate. Don't be "unduly influenced by information gleaned from a vocal minority," like Mr. G.
# Posted By Jose Antonio Vanderhorst-Silverio | 12/8/07 8:02 AM | Report This Comment as Foul/Inappropriate
 
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