Thanks to government incentive programmes and the growing demand for
renewable energy the sight of photovoltaic panels and small wind
turbines on the roofs of homes and buildings is now a common sight
across Europe. With the help of smart electricity grids, consumers could
use their domestic generation capacity to shift from being passive
receivers of electricity to become interactive participants in the
energy supply chain - potentially reducing CO2 emissions in the EU by
9 % and household energy consumption by 10 %.
But for this to happen, consumers need to be able to monitor their
electricity consumption in real time - helping them to manage their
usage so as to save energy and money. And grid operators need to be able
to match electricity supply, from both centralised power-generation
plants and a growing number of these smaller generation sources, with
demand.
The EU-funded 'Energy-saving information platform for generation and
consumption networks' (ENERSIP) project has developed a way to improve
these monitoring and matching processes. By providing energy suppliers
and consumers with real-time and forecast information about energy
consumption, electricity supply and demand could be made to match each
other more closely - reducing waste and improving reliability.
'For a utility company the ideal scenario is that you produce just
enough electricity to meet demand,' explains Dr Leire Bastida, ENERSIP's
project coordinator. 'Sometimes this means forecasting the estimated
demand and defining necessary actions when demand peaks, but equally it
may be better to try and reduce demand instead. We wanted to develop
tools which would help suppliers and consumers to make the best choices
to keep supply and demand in balance.'
Match making
The ENERSIP partners have therefore collaborated on developing an
open platform that provides a suite of energy monitoring and control
services designed to improve the flexibility and responsiveness of the
electricity grid.
'Our platform and services were designed to pave the way for near
real-time generation and consumption matching in residential and
commercial buildings and across whole neighbourhoods,' says Dr Bastida.
'ENERSIP required the development and implementation of many different
technologies, like sensors and wireless communication devices that
monitor the electricity consumption of home appliances, algorithms to
predict energy demand, plus control systems that can switch off
appliances and switch on generation systems.'
'We also wanted to change consumer behaviour,' says Dr Bastida. 'The
power of internet and social networking is key to educating consumers
and encouraging them to change their energy habits.'
As Dr Bastida explains, the project's strategy was simple: getting
high energy efficiency through a mix of coordination, conveniently
managing resources on the grid and altering users' behaviour by giving
them accurate feedback and advice. If users can use this to reduce
energy consumption it could in turn reduce the burden on energy
generation and supply.
From monitoring to prediction
The secret to ENERSIP lies in the communication between every device
in the house - and, ideally, for every house in a whole neighbourhood.
The project developed a set of smart plugs, used to connect appliances
to power sockets, in order to monitor electricity consumption. This data
is sent wirelessly in real-time to a concentrator, which then collates
the data and sends the information via the internet to the local energy
provider or distributor.
'This consumption data is absolutely key to our ideas,' Dr Bastida
explains. 'Once you have this level of data - particularly at the scale
of a neighbourhood or larger commercial site - you can begin to analyse
it, spot patterns and, most importantly, begin to make predictions. If
you can anticipate peaks in demand, you can begin to balance supply and
demand, increasing generation more efficiently or switching off
unnecessary devices until demand drops again.'
These smart plugs have been used with different types of appliances,
from simple lights and electrical heaters to smart devices like TVs and
computers. The ENERSIP research also tested how these appliances should
communicate with each other and other networks within buildings to
create an 'in-building' smart infrastructure which could be controlled
remotely or automatically. The ENERSIP team also looked at how such a
system could be deployed across an entire neighbourhood.
'We made sure our wireless communication with sites across a
neighbourhood had some built-in redundancy, because once you begin to
rely on this data flow to manage the electricity grid, you could end up
with chaos if the network were to go down,' Dr Bastida remarks. 'We
combined mobile-phone networks, public wireless networks and wired
broadband networks to create the neighbourhood-wide communications
network. Even though the main thrust of the project is about optimising
energy supply and demand, on the technical side, the development of the
secure and efficient data communications was a big challenge.'
Changing behaviour - armed with information
Perhaps the biggest challenge for the project, however, was its
'full circle' approach to putting information back into the hands of the
consumers and empowering them to take action. ENERSIP built a web
platform so households could visualise their consumption and optimise
their electricity usage against supply and unit costs.
'You can build a system with clever algorithms to predict peaks,
anticipate demand and control generation in intelligent ways. But our
emissions will never go down until people begin to change their habits
and behaviour,' says Dr Bastida. 'We believe that people will make
sustainable choices and be part of the optimisation process if we give
them information and help them make decisions.'
The ENERSIP web platform provides users with advice (based on its
neighbourhood knowledge and predictive capabilities) on how to reduce or
optimise their consumption, for example, by letting them programme the
washing machine (via that microchip in the plug) to run at 03:00 rather
than during peak demand at 20:00.
The ENERSIP system was tested in two pilot trials that validated the
technology developed, while the project team demonstrated through
simulations a theoretical energy savings potential of up to 30 %.
'This reveals the level of inefficiency which exists today when you
don't balance supply and demand,' says Dr Bastida. 'However, perhaps
most surprising was our finding that as much of half of this energy
saving was achieved through the ENERSIP users' web tool and the
resulting greater awareness of energy efficiency among our volunteer
consumers.'
Taking it further
The ENERSIP project partners continue to develop the project's
prototype technologies and concepts, including in-plug sensors and
actuators for remote and automated control of devices and appliances,
online energy-management tools and mobile apps. The optimisation
algorithms developed in the project are also being applied to business
intelligence tools and decision management systems.
'We have no doubt that people are the key to our energy crisis,'
emphasises Dr Bastida. 'We can only make significant energy savings when
people change their behaviour. Systems like ENERSIP can begin to make
this difference.'
The ENERSIP technologies - monitoring and predicting energy usage,
and providing feedback to the consumer - have the potential to start
making these energy savings a reality, and putting us on the path to
smart electricity grids in the near future.
Link to project on CORDIS:
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FP7 on CORDIS-
ENERSIP project factsheet on CORDIS
Link to project's website:
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'Energy-saving information platform for generation and consumption networks' website
Link to related video:
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ENERSIP project videos
Other links:
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European Commission's Digital Agenda website