Climbers' Corner • Tree Academy
Monday • Tuesday • Wednesday
Economics of UVM: Balancing Preventive and Corrective Maintenance
Summary
Utility vegetation managers face a challenge common to
management in general, that being how to maximize performance with limited
resources. For vegetation managers, this
has typically involved attempting to achieve an appropriate balance between
investments in preventive tasks and the cost of corrective actions. As financial resources become scarcer, an
optimal balance can be achieved by optimizing cost, system performance, and
levels of service.
In the case of
most engineered systems, a great deal is known about the performance and
failure rates of critical system components, making it possible to conduct
in-depth quantitative analysis. In
contrast, Utility Vegetation Management (UVM) analysis is complicated by the
current lack of quantitative data, and by the fact that a major component of
any UVM analysis involves a biological system.
Information related to economic considerations for vegetation is
generally qualitative in nature. The
quantitative cost and efficacy data that are available tend to be dated, and do
not represent many of the approaches that are found in the industry today.
This presentation will
present findings of project intended to establish an analytic framework and
algorithm(s) that can be used in a financial assessment of the costs and
benefits of various vegetation maintenance management scenarios. It will include an overview of literature
reviewed, a business model framework identifying the most important variables
to be considered in a complete analysis, and a description of the methodology
that would be necessary to establish the value of all variables in the economic
model.
Conference Proceedings Documents
Presenters
John
Goodfellow
is a degreed forester and has 35 years’ experience in
the utility industry, having held positions of increasing responsibility for
Utility Vegetation Management, Transmission & Distributions (T&D)
operations, maintenance, engineering, and construction at three large
investor-owned electric & gas utilities. He is recognized as a leading
authority on utility vegetation management and reliability, and currently
manages an active portfolio of research projects related to utility vegetation
management including work involving high voltage and mechanical testing of
individual trees, characterizing risks in populations of trees, and the
application of RCM to vegetation maintenance activities.
Climbers' Corner • Tree Academy
Monday • Tuesday • Wednesday