Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
IVPower is automated fault analysis and power grid monitoring software from NetCeler, primarily aimed at transmission/distribution system operators (TSOs/DSOs) and large electric utilities. It is not positioned as a general-purpose SaaS product, but as a specialized monitoring and disturbance analysis platform for critical infrastructure in the power sector, used to understand short-circuit events, power quality disturbances, and wide-area grid phenomena.
Based on the publicly available materials, IVPower focuses on consolidating field data from different sources and unsynchronized systems into a single scalable database, while processing COMTRADE files and SER logs to generate a “network view” of disturbances. Its modules include Automated Fault Analysis, Power Quality Monitoring, and Wide Area Monitoring. In operational terms, it can support accurate fault location, reduce outage duration, provide operators with manual reclosing recommendations, automatically reconstruct event sequences, perform routine checks and time measurements, and flag abnormal conditions for expert review.
IVPower provides role-based access control and supports secure web applications. Notifications can be sent by email to authorized personnel, and LDAP and Active Directory are supported. This suggests it is well suited to power companies that already have enterprise directory services and strict permission structures. Information security is described as part of the entire project delivery process, but the public materials do not disclose specific security certifications, encryption mechanisms, or compliance standards. For third-party integrations, the confirmed items are LDAP, AD, COMTRADE, and SER logs.
The website does not disclose packages, pricing, a free version, or trial information. Judging from its described project process, IVPower appears to be more of a project-delivered software solution, covering initiation, quality planning, functional specifications, technical descriptions, software engineering, testing, deployment, acceptance, handover to production, and warranty. NetCeler also provides support and maintenance through service contracts.
Its strengths are deep alignment with power-sector use cases, coverage across control rooms, operations and maintenance, and asset management, plus NetCeler’s long industry track record since 1997 and claimed deployments in Latin America, Europe, Africa, and Asia. The downside is that the public information is mostly solution-level overview material, with limited detail on pricing, deployment models, APIs, developer support, or trials. It is best suited to transmission and distribution companies that need automated fault location, disturbance review, and protection system monitoring; it is not a fit for general enterprise software procurement.
Availability from mainland China is unknown, and payment methods or local support are not disclosed. For deployment in China, key areas to evaluate would include network connectivity, cross-border data transfer, MLPS/CII compliance, local implementation capability, and integration with domestic dispatch automation, protection fault recording, and asset systems. Comparable domestic power automation solutions may include those from NARI, XJ Electric, and Sifang.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on ivpower.com official site.
ivpower.com is an Unknown Energy provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 7.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach ivpower.com directly.