A substation is a part of an electrical generation, transmission, and distribution system. Early electrical substations
required manual switching or adjustment of equipment, and manual collection of data for load, energy consumption, and
abnormal events. As the complexity of distribution networks grew, it became economically necessary to automate supervision
and control of substations from a centrally attended point, to allow overall coordination in case of emergencies and to reduce
operating costs. Early efforts to remote control substations used dedicated communication wires, often run alongside power
circuits. Power-line carrier, microwave radio, fibre optic cables as well as dedicated wired remote-control circuits have all been
applied to Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition (SCADA) for substations. The development of the microprocessor made for
an exponential increase in the number of points that could be economically controlled and monitored.