Jeraldin Ahila was known in the power‑industry circles as the kind of engineer who could coax electricity out of a stubborn transformer the way a violinist draws a melody from a broken string. With a doctorate in Electrical Engineering and a reputation for solving “impossible” grid problems, she had been recruited by , a multinational firm tasked with modernizing the aging transmission and distribution (T&D) network across the sprawling megacity of Novara .
This kind of analytical treatment appears in any good T&D book.