New power-sector training modules added, including turbines and substations.
LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM, March 23, 2026 /EINPresswire.com/ — saVRee, a UK-based provider of technical e-learning for industrial and energy sectors, has expanded its online power engineering courses with new modules covering turbines, generators, substations, and electrical protection systems. The update reflects ongoing changes in the power sector, where utilities and industrial operators are balancing ageing infrastructure, workforce turnover, and rising system complexity.
The expanded curriculum introduces structured training on turbine operation, generator fundamentals, switching equipment, substation layouts, and protection devices. The new content is designed for technicians, operators, and engineers who require a working understanding of how power systems behave under real operating conditions, rather than purely theoretical instruction.
Across the power industry, skills gaps have become more pronounced as experienced engineers retire and fewer new entrants arrive with hands-on exposure to large-scale power equipment. At the same time, operators are expected to manage increasingly interconnected systems, respond to grid disturbances, and maintain reliability under tighter operational constraints. As a result, many organisations are re-evaluating how technical knowledge is transferred and maintained.
saVRee’s latest update addresses this challenge by focusing on system-level understanding. The new modules explain how individual components interact within a complete power system, including thermodynamic cycles, electrical characteristics, and typical operating states. Learners are guided through start-up and shutdown processes, load variations, and fault conditions that commonly occur in generation and transmission environments.
A key feature of the expanded courses is the use of interactive 3D models. These models allow learners to examine internal turbine geometry, generator rotor and stator arrangements, transformer winding configurations, and switchgear operating mechanisms. By visualising internal components and their movement, users can better understand how equipment responds to operational changes and why certain procedures are followed in practice.
The content has been developed to be equipment-agnostic, avoiding reliance on specific manufacturers or proprietary designs. This approach is intended to make the training relevant across a wide range of facilities, from utility-scale power stations to industrial plants with on-site generation or high-voltage distribution systems.
For organisations, the practical impact of the expansion lies in its potential to support workforce readiness and consistency. The modules can be used for onboarding new staff, refresher training for experienced personnel, or cross-training employees moving into power-related roles. By providing a shared technical foundation, companies can reduce reliance on informal knowledge transfer and minimise the risk of inconsistent understanding across teams.
“Power systems are often taught in fragments, which makes it difficult for people to see how everything fits together during real operations,” said Matthew Holland, Founder of saVRee. “This update focuses on building that system awareness, using visual explanations that reflect what technicians and engineers actually see in the field.”
The expanded modules are delivered through saVRee’s existing online platform and are available for self-paced learning. This format allows users to access training alongside shift work and operational responsibilities, without the need for extended classroom sessions.
The new content is now live as part of saVRee’s online power engineering courses, available at https://savree.com/en/online-power-engineering-courses.
Jonathan Russell
saVRee
+1 786-889-7338
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