Glossary - G
The utilities industry is awash with jargon and apparently meaningless abbreviations. We aim to explain what some of them mean. Please use either the search box (above and left) or the A to Z matrix to the right.
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 definitions.
- Gas Producer
- A Company that explores for gas, drills the wells and extracts the gas from the seabed.
- Gas year
- The period commencing 06:00hrs 01 October through to 06:00hrs 01 October the following year.
- Generator
- Producer of electricity
- Gershon Review
- The Gershon review was a review of efficiency in the UK public sector conducted in 2004-5 by Sir Peter Gershon. Gordon Brown, Chancellor of the Exchequer, appointed Peter Gershon, at that time the head of the Office of Government Commerce, to review operations across all public services and make recommendations regarding expenditure and efficiency. His report recommended making savings for Financial Year 2005-6, to be achieved through dramatic changes to the organisation of each government department and automating their work patterns, in order to 'release' resources from the public sector budget that was then approximately £320bn. These savings were to be achieved by 2007.The effect of these objectives has been for all government departments to agree reductions on their long-term budgets, and then work out how to fulfill these challenging promises without crippling their existing obligations and service.
- GPRS
- General Packet Radio Service is still the most widely used mobile data service in use, but is rapidly being overtaken by 3G and HSDPA.
- Grid supply point
- Point between transmission and distribution systems where responsibility for electricity supply transfers from National Grid Transco to the local REC.
- GSM
- The Global System for Mobile communications (GSM: originally from Groupe Spécial Mobile) is currently still the most popular standard for mobile phones in the world. It's widespread use enables roaming to work between different networks in 212 countries and territories where it is used.
- GW
- Gigawatt = 1,000 MW