Landis+Gyr | Americas Blog

Bridging the Gap: How DERMS, Grid Edge Intelligence, and Next Gen AMI are Transforming Rural Electrification

Written by Shishir Shekhar | 9/10/25 1:24 PM

Despite decades of progress, rural electrification remains a global challenge. Extending traditional grid infrastructure to remote regions often results in fragile systems, high operational costs, and limited-service reliability. But a technology-driven shift is underway—one that leverages Distributed Energy Resource Management Systems (DERMS), grid edge intelligence, and Next Gen AMI solutions to create smarter, decentralized energy networks for rural communities. This new model doesn’t just deliver electricity; it empowers sustainable development and grid resiliency. 

The legacy approach of stretching central grids into sparsely populated areas faces persistent obstacles:

  1. Expensive infrastructure with low financial return; 
  2. Maintenance challenges over vast terrains; and 
  3. Inability to integrate local renewable resources effectively. 

As global energy needs evolve, rural areas demand solutions that are flexible, decentralized, and economically viable. 


DERMS: The Heart of Decentralized Energy Management 

Distributed Energy Resource Management Systems (DERMS) serve as the central nervous system for modern rural energy networks. By enabling utilities to monitor, control, and optimize distributed energy resourcessuch as solar, distributed generators, flexible demand, wind, microgrids, and storage DERMS facilitates: 

  1. Real-time energy balancing; 
  2. Localized generation and consumption coordination; 
  3. Seamless renewable integration; and 
  4. Scalable microgrid management without reliance on central infrastructure. 

With DERMS, rural communities can move beyond dependency on fragile grid extensions toward resilient, self-sustaining energy ecosystems. 

Grid Edge Intelligence: Local Control with Global Impact 

Grid edge intelligence places smart decision-making at the edge of the network, where power is generated and consumed. Smart meters, inverters, intelligent controllers, and local data analytics enable benefits such as autonomous DER operation, voltage and frequency regulation of microgrids, and rapid adaptation to load changes and faults. 

For rural electrification, this means grids that can operate reliably, even with minimal central oversight, which improves service quality and operational efficiency. 

Next Gen AMI: The Smart Grid’s Data Backbone 

Modern Advanced Metering Infrastructure (also commonly referred to as AMI 2.0) delivers more than billing data; it provides two-way, high-frequency communication with edge devices, real-time operational visibility, and edge-based analytics integrated with DERMS platforms. 

With a more intelligent, connected grid edge, utilities can manage distributed resources, optimize load control, and engage customers in new ways, laying the foundation for data-driven rural grid management. 

Use Case Spotlight: Smarter Irrigation Pump Control with Landis+Gyr in the Midwest U.S. 

In the agricultural heartland of the Midwest United States, irrigation pumps represent a critical yet challenging load for rural electric cooperatives. The high energy usage and long duration of operation often lead to sharp spikes in peak demand, along with voltage fluctuations on rural feeders. It stands to reason that coordination of pump operation through demand response programs can provide critical cost savings and power quality benefits. 

The Landis+Gyr Solution

Through the deployment of Landis+Gyr’s Gridstream® Connect IoT platform, combined with advanced load management, several Midwest cooperatives have implemented intelligent irrigation control strategies that deliver tangible results: 

Smart Function  Impact Benefit 
Dynamic Pump Scheduling  Shifted operations based on grid load and renewable generation  Reduced peak demand by 20–25% 
Remote Load Control  Automated pump management via AMI-connected switches  Improved operational efficiency
Renewable Energy Integration  Aligned pump use with local solar/wind availability Enhanced renewable utilization
Grid Stability Enhancement  Managed voltage fluctuations through coordinated control  Increased grid reliability
Farmer Engagement Tools  Provided real-time data and load control notifications Improved customer satisfaction and participation

By intelligently managing irrigation loads, a vital load in the Midwest, Landis+Gyr has been able to demonstrate the value smart grid technologies bring for both capacity management, cost savings and infrastructure protection while strengthening rural grid reliability.  

The Future: Technology-Driven, Community-Centric Electrification 

The convergence of DERMS, Grid Edge Intelligence, and Next Gen AMI unlocks a new era of rural electrification characterized by: 

  1. Lower infrastructure and operational costs; 
  2. Higher system resilience with decentralized assets; 
  3. Seamless renewable energy integration; and 
  4. Data-driven management and customer engagement.

This model transcends traditional grid extension—empowering rural communities with sustainable, reliable, and cost-effective energy solutions.

Bridging the rural electrification gap requires more than wires and substations, it demands intelligent systems that empower both utilities and communities. With proven platforms like Landis+Gyr’s Gridstream® Connect, advanced DERMS, and cutting-edge grid edge solutions, rural regions are no longer on the sidelines of the energy revolution. They are becoming active participants in a smarter, cleaner, and more resilient energy future. 

This is not just a technological shift, it’s a transformation of opportunity and empowerment for millions.