GE Vernova Inc. (NYSE: GEV) has unveiled GridOS for Transmission, a unified grid intelligence platform designed to help utilities coordinate faster and more effectively across their networks.

The launch took place on June 9 at Orchestrate 2026, the company’s annual grid software conference, where GE Vernova also released two new AI whitepapers addressing grid planning and autonomous grid-edge operations.

GridOS for Transmission pulls together intelligence from several core transmission applications, consolidating data into a single decision environment for grid operators.

The platform integrates tools including AEMS, which stands for Advanced Energy Management System, alongside DDLR, or Digital Dynamic Line Rating, and WAMS, the Wide-Area Monitoring System.

Forecasting tools, DER management capabilities, Visual Intelligence features, and asset behavior data are also incorporated, giving operators a context-rich and unified view of their networks.

Philippe Piron, CEO of GE Vernova’s Electrification segment, said that “meeting rising electricity demand will require more than adding generation, it demands a grid that can coordinate, adapt, and act faster than ever before.”

Piron added that with software now “central to how utilities plan investments, operate networks, and respond to near real-time conditions,” the announcements at Orchestrate reflect the company’s direction.

He said the launches underscore GE Vernova’s “conviction that the grid of the future runs on intelligence and that utilities need that intelligence across every layer, from long-range planning to the grid edge.”

GE Vernova operates across three primary business segments, those being Power, Wind, and Electrification, positioning the company across multiple pillars of the modern energy transition.

The GridOS launch reflects growing industry pressure on utilities to modernize transmission infrastructure as electricity demand accelerates, driven by data centers, electrification trends, and industrial reshoring.

Hedge funds have identified GEV as one of their high-conviction holdings, signaling broader institutional confidence in the company’s long-term strategic positioning within the energy software and infrastructure space.

The two AI whitepapers released alongside GridOS for Transmission signal GE Vernova’s intent to anchor its software offerings firmly within the emerging debate around autonomous and AI-driven grid management.