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Keywords = Mas2tering project

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5 pages, 199 KB  
Proceeding Paper
Putting Residential Flexibility Management into Action with Pilot Sites in Europe: From Mas2tering to DRIvE Projects
by Marie-France Robbe, Meritxell Vinyals, Stefan Lodeweyckx, Juan Manuel Espeche, Paul-Emmanuel Brun, Sergio Valentino Costa, Monjur Mourshed, Aleksandar Kavgić and Tatiana Loureiro
Proceedings 2018, 2(15), 1130; https://doi.org/10.3390/proceedings2151130 - 23 Aug 2018
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2605
Abstract
The Mas2tering and DRIvE European projects develop a software platform to manage the residential and tertiary energy flexibility in local communities of prosumers. This platform includes forecasting, optimization, cybersecurity and fast-response capabilities modules. Business models and use cases were developed, taking into account [...] Read more.
The Mas2tering and DRIvE European projects develop a software platform to manage the residential and tertiary energy flexibility in local communities of prosumers. This platform includes forecasting, optimization, cybersecurity and fast-response capabilities modules. Business models and use cases were developed, taking into account the regulatory challenges. The platform will be implemented in five pilot sites across three countries. Full article
(This article belongs to the Proceedings of Sustainable Places 2018)
5 pages, 201 KB  
Proceeding Paper
Residential Electricity Tariffs in Europe: Current Situation, Evolution and Impact on Residential Flexibility Markets
by Youssef Oualmakran, Juan Manuel Espeche, Mario Sisinni, Thomas Messervey and Zia Lennard
Proceedings 2017, 1(7), 1104; https://doi.org/10.3390/proceedings1071104 - 9 Nov 2017
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 2885
Abstract
Residential flexibility (a.k.a demand response) is a key component of smart grids to reduce our carbon footprint, to have reliable power (balance between power and demand, and avoiding congestion) and more affordable electricity tariffs. However, to have a significant participation in the flexibility [...] Read more.
Residential flexibility (a.k.a demand response) is a key component of smart grids to reduce our carbon footprint, to have reliable power (balance between power and demand, and avoiding congestion) and more affordable electricity tariffs. However, to have a significant participation in the flexibility markets, households needs good price signals. Today, the electricity bill components (volumetric and capacity for both consumption and generation) are evolving and grid services are increasingly more available to households. This is due to the evolution in the energy mix, deployment of new technologies (smart meter roll-out, gradual uptake of electric vehicles, heat pumps and batteries), regional integration (interconnectors and integration of balancing markets) and evolution of society (sharing economy or Peer2peer and ubiquity of smartphones). These trends will have a quantitative impact on the different energy bills in the short term (2020) and longer term. Further investigation is also suggested to go from the qualitative analysis to a better quantitative analysis. Full article
(This article belongs to the Proceedings of the Sustainable Places 2017 (SP2017) Conference)
5 pages, 465 KB  
Proceeding Paper
Mas²tering: Business Cases and Technologies for Low-Voltage Flexibility Aggregation with Prosumers and Local Energy Communities Workshop
by Thomas Messervey, Mario Sisinni, Juan Manuel Espeche, Zia Lennard, Meritxell Vinyals, Marie-France Robbe, James Sharman and Julien Ardeois
Proceedings 2017, 1(7), 1103; https://doi.org/10.3390/proceedings1071103 - 9 Nov 2017
Viewed by 2533
Abstract
This report summarises the conduct and key findings from the fourth and final scientific workshop organised under the Mas²tering project (Multi-Agent Systems and Secured coupling of Telecom and Energy gRIds for Next Generation smart grid services), which is co-funded by the European Union [...] Read more.
This report summarises the conduct and key findings from the fourth and final scientific workshop organised under the Mas²tering project (Multi-Agent Systems and Secured coupling of Telecom and Energy gRIds for Next Generation smart grid services), which is co-funded by the European Union under the FP7 programme. The workshop was co-located with Sustainable Places 2017 hosted by Teesside University in Middlesbrough, UK. Sustainable Places is an annual international conference focused on innovations for Energy-efficient Buildings and the wider smart grids that connect them. This fourth edition of the Mas2tering workshop series aimed at validating the project’s work to date with respect to its approach, technologies, use cases and in-progress results. For this purpose, a panel of three experts was formed and to them the project presented an Overview & Approach, Physical Testing at the ENGIE Crigen facilities, simulation of the Cardiff Grid, Project Use Cases and the Business Model Approach. Thematic issues and conclusions from the presentations and discussions are provided herein. Full article
(This article belongs to the Proceedings of the Sustainable Places 2017 (SP2017) Conference)
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