BCBusiness

May 2016 Here Comes the Future

With a mission to inform, empower, celebrate and advocate for British Columbia's current and aspiring business leaders, BCBusiness go behind the headlines and bring readers face to face with the key issues and people driving business in B.C.

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BCBUSINESS.CA MAY 2017 BCBUSINESS 51 Conducting Things The world's energy grids are crackling with electricity generated from a growing array of sources. Enbala Power Networks wants to make them more efficient J ob titles at Enbala Power Networks Inc. are decidedly playful: simplic- ity seeker, planetary activist and Mr. Roboto, the latter ascribed to president and CEO Bud Vos. These are handles you might expect to see on Lululemon Athletica Inc.'s career page, not on the website of a company aim- ing to keep the world's electric grids in a constant state of reliable balance by harnessing distributed energy resources like solar, wind and conventional hydro- electricity. Electrical engineer and chief technology officer Malcolm Metcalfe launched Enbala in Vancouver back in 2003 to help owners of commercial buildings cut heating costs and shrink emissions. The business has since applied its smart-grid software to utilities as they shift to a wider range of renewable energy sources. It's banking on a growing need for DERMS (distributed energy resource management sys- tems) worldwide to keep everything running smoothly. The com- pany likens this task to conducting an orchestra—hence the name of its marquee software platform, Symphony by Enbala, which uses real-time data and communication infrastructure to control an evolving modern electricity grid. The DERMS market remains modest in North America, but globally it could hit US$70 billion by 2022, Florida-based Zion Market Research projects. Enbala, named to the 2017 Global Cleantech 100, now employs 40 and has three offices in Toronto and the U.S. in addition to its corporate headquarters in North Vancouver. In February, the firm announced US$12 million in financing from a round led by ABB Technology Ventures, a division of European tech conglomerate ABB, and including investors such as Gen- eral Electric subsid- iary GE Ventures. "The new funding fuels the company for growth and continued R&D and gives us a really long runway," Vos says. n ALL TOGETHER NOW Enbala Power Networks makes smart-grid software OPPOSITE: COURTESY OF TERRELLA; ABOVE: COURTESY OF ENBALA

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