Designing the Business Ecosystem of a Decentralised Energy Datahub
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Models
- Wholesale and retail electricity prices
- Faster, easier, more efficient and more customer-friendly billing
- Consumption metering per 15 min via Automated Meter Reading (AMR)
- Power outage assessment and early warning mechanisms
- Fast detection and locating the anomalies in the power system
- Real-time pricing or other smart tariff services
- Demand Response (DR) measures to save energy
- Efficiency in energy generation
- Algorithmic trading
- Automated trading
2.1. The Business Ecosystem of the DenHub
2.1.1. The Problem You Want to Solve
- A.
- The size of the problem
- B.
- An ecosystem as a right choice
- C.
- The ecosystem you need
2.1.2. Stakeholders and Participants of the Ecosystem
- A.
- What are the players and their roles?
- Transmission System Operators (TSOs)-Full Access (Read and Write)
- Distribution System Operators (DSOs)-Read-Only Access
- Premium Customers-Read-Only Access
- Basic Customers-Profile Access
- Regulators-Read-Only Access
- Electricity Retailers-Read-Only Access
- Research Centers-Read-Only Access
- Entrepreneurs-Read-Only Access
- The Datahub-Full Access (including commit access)
- B.
- Who should be the orchestrator?
- C.
- How can the orchestrator motivate the other players?
2.1.3. The Initial Governance Model of the Ecosystem
- A.
- How open should the ecosystem be?
- B.
- What should the orchestrator control?
2.1.4. Capturing the Value of the Ecosystem
- A.
- What and whom should you charge?
2.1.5. Solving the Chicken-Egg Problem
- A.
- What does it take to achieve critical mass?
- B.
- What is the minimum viable ecosystem?
- C.
- Which side of the market should you focus on?
2.1.6. Ensuring the Evolvability of Your Ecosystem
- A.
- How can you scale/defend the ecosystem?
- B.
- How can you expand the ecosystem?
- C.
- Protecting against backlash
2.2. The Enabling Technology: Smart Metering
2.2.1. Smart Metering
2.2.2. Smart Metering Adaption
2.2.3. Working Principles of Smart Metering
- A.
- The smart metering device
- B.
- The data concentrator
- C.
- A communication system that enables bi-directional data flow
- D.
- Central management and control systems
3. Methods
3.1. Incentives Structure
- –
- Bitcoin and Ethereum Blockchain (Proof of Work): approx. 15 transactions per second.
- –
- Ethereum 2.0 Blockchain (Proof of Stake): approx. 100,000 transactions per second.
3.2. Blockchain Typology
3.2.1. Public Systems
3.2.2. Private Systems
4. Results
4.1. Decentralised Storage and Cloud
4.1.1. Cloud Storage Networks
4.1.2. Decentralised Storage Networks
4.1.3. Blockchain-Based Decentralised Storage Systems
4.2. The DenHub Model and Comparisons
4.3. GDPR and Date Security
4.3.1. Smart Meters
4.3.2. Blockchain
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions and Impact
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Company | Country | Datahub Owner | Datahub Usage Situation in State | Finance/Revenue Stream |
---|---|---|---|---|
ATRIAS | Belgium | DSO | The construction phase | Not applicable yet |
ElHub | Norway | Statnett, Norway’s TSO | In service | No information available |
DCC (Data communication company) | UK | Capita PLC is a private company and regulated by the Office of Gas and Electricity Markets (Ofgem) | In service | Costs are recovered from energy suppliers, network operators, and other authorised users. |
Energie Data Services Nederland (EDSN) | The Netherlands | DSO and TSO | In service | Depending on the specific function, the Datahub is financed by the grid. |
Energinet.dk | Denmark | Energinet, Denmark’s TSO | In service | No information available |
Elmarknadshubb | Sweden | Svenska Kraftnät, Sweden’s TSO | Project on hold due to delays in legislation and other uncertainties | All stakeholders will be billed by the hub owner (TSO). The cost for the Datahub will not be financed by the grid fee. |
Fingrid Datahub Oy | Finland | Fingrid Oyj, Finland’s TSO | In service | Costs will be charged to users. The exact charging scheme is not available yet. |
Elering | Estonia | Elering, Estonia’s TSO | In service | No information available |
Centralised Datahubs | Decentralised Datahubs | |
---|---|---|
Ownership/Accountability | The owner of the Datahub is the centralised authority; there is no institution for checking accountability | The owner of the Datahub is the network itself, and it is open for all the market players, including basic customers |
Management | Easy to communicate and coordinate | Can be managed by a well-constructed consensus of the market players |
Updates/Changes | Top-down approach | Collective approach |
Process Maintenance | Easy to maintain | Small changes generally are ignored |
Security | Hard to protect; records will be held only in centres, and back-ups are held in external centres. | Easy to protect; records will be held for all of the network participants |
Privacy/Access | Premium customers, including DSOs, TSOs, regulating authorities, exchanges, and retailers with premium access | |
Basic customers with basic access | ||
Risk Assessment | Single point of failure | No single point of failure, storing data across all network of computer |
Scalability | Easy to distribute data to users from a single-centre, high | A bottleneck for current decentralised systems, especially with large numbers of users, but can be handled with several techniques (sharding, block size, DAGs). |
Regulation | Large number of third parties mean more regulation and complexity | Designed to be more compatible with regulations, few third parties, transparent participant and smart contract structure |
Bitcoin | Ethereum | |
---|---|---|
Release date | January 2009 | June 2015 |
Usage | To buy goods and services, to store value | To create distributed applications |
Purpose | Cryptocurrency created to compete against the gold standard and fiat currencies | Token able to facilitate smart contracts (e.g., in an energy exchange) |
Storage Type | Blockchain | Decentralised | Open Source | Scalability | Privacy | Data Processing |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cloud Storage Networks | No | No | No | High | Low | Yes |
Decentralised Storage Networks | No | Yes | No | Complicated | High | No |
Blockchain-based Storage Systems | Yes | Yes | Yes | Complicated | High | No |
DenHub | Yes | Yes | Yes | Complicated | High | Yes |
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Share and Cite
Küfeoğlu, S.; Açıkgöz, E.; Taşcı, Y.E.; Arslan, T.Y.; Priesmann, J.; Praktiknjo, A. Designing the Business Ecosystem of a Decentralised Energy Datahub. Energies 2022, 15, 650. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15020650
Küfeoğlu S, Açıkgöz E, Taşcı YE, Arslan TY, Priesmann J, Praktiknjo A. Designing the Business Ecosystem of a Decentralised Energy Datahub. Energies. 2022; 15(2):650. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15020650
Chicago/Turabian StyleKüfeoğlu, Sinan, Eray Açıkgöz, Yunus Emre Taşcı, Taha Yasin Arslan, Jan Priesmann, and Aaron Praktiknjo. 2022. "Designing the Business Ecosystem of a Decentralised Energy Datahub" Energies 15, no. 2: 650. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15020650
APA StyleKüfeoğlu, S., Açıkgöz, E., Taşcı, Y. E., Arslan, T. Y., Priesmann, J., & Praktiknjo, A. (2022). Designing the Business Ecosystem of a Decentralised Energy Datahub. Energies, 15(2), 650. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15020650