by Stavros Sachinis, Global Business Development & Commercial Strategy
Jul 31, 2025
The energy transition is no longer a distant ambition—it’s a daily operational reality. Across the U.S. and Europe, utilities and distribution system operators (DSOs) are facing unprecedented complexity. Aging infrastructure, surging demand, and a tidal wave of distributed renewables are converging to stress the grid in ways it was never designed to handle.
Today’s grid must respond to AI-driven data center growth, rapid EV charging, prosumers pushing energy upstream, and weather patterns that are anything but typical.
Yet the tools many utilities rely on still assume a world of static infrastructure and top-down control. As a result, operators risk making high-stakes decisions with limited visibility and outdated models.
So how do you plan for—and operate—something this dynamic? It starts with understanding one of the most powerful tools now available to grid operators: the digital twin.
When people hear “digital twin,” they often think of 3D models or virtual reality. While visualization is part of the story, it’s far from the whole picture. True digital twins go deeper—they represent value flows, energy flows, financial dynamics, market behaviors,weather patterns, and even human unpredictability.
According to the Digital Twin Consortium, a digital twin is:
“An integrated data-driven virtual representation of real-world entities and processes, with synchronized interaction at a specified frequency and fidelity.”
Digital twins are motivated by outcomes, powered by integration, and guided by domain knowledge. They transform businesses by enabling holistic understanding, continuous improvement, and real-time decision-making.
It’s no longer just about seeing—it’s about simulating, predicting, and orchestrating.
In the U.S., over 70% of transmission infrastructure is already halfway through its expected lifespan. Distribution networks are under pressure from electrified transport, heating, and—most disruptively—data centers. In 2023, data centers consumed 4.4% of total U.S. electricity. By 2030, that could rise to 12%, or 130 GW—equivalent to the output of over 100 nuclear power plants.
Europe faces similar challenges. DSOs are being asked to double grid connection capacity while managing bi-directional power flows from rooftop solar, batteries, and EVs. Add climate-driven weather volatility, and the complexity becomes staggering.
Digital twins don’t simplify complexity—they make it visible, understandable, and actionable. Here’s how:
Enter Enscryb—a digital twin platform purpose-built for energy flexibility. Enscryb, a Nokia venture is designed to simulate, orchestrate, and optimize the electrical and financial outcomes of distributed energy assets in real time.
Enscryb’s ecosystem includes:
In Europe, better coordination between transmission and distribution system operators is critical. As more generation connects at the distribution level, system balancing becomes a shared responsibility.
Digital twins can serve as a common language between TSOs and DSOs—offering a unified view of grid conditions, flexibility potential, and operational constraints. This is essential for unlocking the full value of distributed flexibility and ensuring system stability.
To truly transform the grid, digital twins must evolve from pilot projects to core infrastructure. This means:
The technology is ready. The use cases are proven. And the need has never been greater.
So—how are you using digital twins in your strategy? What challenges are you facing in orchestrating DERs at scale?
Let’s connect and explore how we can build a more flexible, resilient, and intelligent energy future—together - Fill out the form below and let’s start the conversation.
Whether you’re a utility executive, grid operator, or technology partner, the question is no longer if you’ll use digital twins—but how fast you can scale them.
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