A simulated tour of the Atlas energy-advisory suite along its 6-step process — from operation & transformation through feasibility and design to compliance validation. Run a renewable-integration study on a fictional planning region and watch the congestion metrics move. Every region and number below is fictional.
Try it: step through the six advisory services in the left rail (grouped into the three clusters). Open Feasibility Check, size the proposed renewable cluster with the slider, optionally reinforce a corridor, then run the interconnection study to compare the baseline and studied grid states.
Conduct detailed technical and economic feasibility studies, including interconnection assessments, compliance reviews, and risk analysis, to validate project viability and minimize implementation risks.
Fictional 6-node transmission region. A new renewable cluster is proposed at Thistle Bay. Set the cluster size and (optionally) a corridor reinforcement, then run the interconnection study to see the before / after grid state. Every MW below is illustrative demo data.
Illustrative interconnection study on a fictional region — the toy capacity model and every MW are demo data. Atlas' real feasibility scope (interconnection assessment, cost-benefit, site selection, early-stage power-system studies) is transcribed from the official one-pager deck.
Atlas is Siemens Energy's vendor-agnostic energy-advisory portfolio, structured as a 6-step process across three clusters — energy transformation advisory (operation & transformation, investment planning), detailed grid planning & simulation (feasibility check, preliminary design advisory, detailed design support) and regulatory & normative compliance (compliance validation). That structure — the demo's left rail — the five shared main-benefit pillars, the per-service features and deliverables, and the named compliance frameworks (NERC CIP, CIP-010, IEC 62443, NIS2, IEC 61850/GOOSE) all come from the official one-pager deck. The track-record figures in the status bar (1200+ studies & projects/yr, 200+ core experts, clients in 40+ countries) come from the Atlas suite brochure; the deck separately cites a presence in over 90 countries.
The “Rivermark planning region”, its six nodes (“Aldergrove 400”, “Kestrel Junction”, …), every corridor, MW figure, utilisation percentage and the before/after congestion metrics are fictional demo data driven by a deterministic toy capacity model — no real utility, project, site or grid appears anywhere, and the Atlas docs carry no network ratings, so none are claimed as product specs. The interconnection-study numbers are illustrative planning figures, not Siemens Energy specifications. The badge on the frame is rendered by the demo itself, so it can't be cropped away.