Major Brazilian electricity companies are accelerating the adoption of artificial intelligence, implementing new technologies across various aspects of infrastructure operations and administrative management. Industry executives report that the resulting annualized benefits have already reached hundreds of millions of Brazilian reais.
Axia, the largest power company in Latin America, which operates dozens of hydroelectric plants and a 74,000-kilometer transmission network, has deployed multiple AI solutions to enhance efficiency and grid resilience. Applications range from using meteorological models to assess wildfire and extreme wind risks to prevent transmission line outages, to administrative functions such as contract auditing and calculating legal liabilities. The Vice President of Innovation and Technology at Axia stated that these initiatives are already contributing approximately 100 million reais in positive annual impact for the company.
Applications in the power distribution sector are also yielding significant results. The Equatorial group manages a portfolio of over 40 innovation projects utilizing AI for asset management and customer interaction. To tackle the persistent issue of electricity theft, the company is employing computer vision and satellite imagery for automated inspections to identify unauthorized usage. One specific initiative alone has detected more than 415,000 fraud cases across all its concession areas, delivering over 185 million reais in direct financial gains for Equatorial in the past two years.
However, experts note that this trend has not yet become widespread across the entire power sector. Most companies' applications remain at a "very preliminary" stage, with efficiency gains falling far short of AI's true potential. A consulting firm executive indicated that the maturity of AI adoption in the power industry still lags behind sectors like finance, and the level of AI expertise among professionals in the energy industry is generally low.
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