An Exploration of the Three-Layer Model Including Stakeholders, Markets and Technologies for Assessments of Residential Smart Grids
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Layers
1.1.1. Stakeholders Layer
1.1.2. Markets Layer
1.1.3. Technologies Layer
1.1.4. Flexibility
1.2. Aim
2. Research Approach
3. Findings for Each of the Three Layers
3.1. Stakeholders Layer
3.2. Market Layer
3.2.1. Pricing of Electricity and the EU Electricity Market
3.2.2. Flexibility of the Market
3.3. Technologies Layer
3.3.1. Distributed Energy Resources
3.3.2. Demand Side Flexibility
3.3.3. Resource-Side Flexibility
4. Discussion and Perspectives
5. Conclusions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Disclaimer
References
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Stakeholder Group | Description |
---|---|
Residential customer/prosumer | A residential customer or utility business that produces electricity. Roof top PV installations and energy storage battery systems are examples of homeowner investments that allow people to do both consume and produce energy for use locally or to export during certain parts of the day or year. |
Aggregator | A person or company combining two or more customers into a single purchasing unit in order to negotiate the purchase of electricity from retail electric providers, or the sale of electricity to these entities. Aggregators also combine smaller participants (as providers or customers or curtailment) to enable distributed resources to play in the larger markets. |
Balancing responsible party (BRP) | A legal entity that manages a portfolio involving the demand and supply of electricity, and has a commitment to the system operator in a European Network of Transmission System Operators for Electricity (ENTSO-E) control zone to balance supply and demand in the managed portfolio on a Program Time Unit (PTU) basis according to energy programs. |
Balancing service provider (BSP) | In the EU Internal Electricity Market, this is a market participant providing balancing services to its connecting transmission system operator (TSO), or in case of the TSO-BSP model, to its contracting TSO. |
Supplier | A supplier provides energy to end customers, based on a contract. The energy can be from the supplier’s own power plants or traded in relevant markets. |
Distribution system operator (DSO) | The DSO is responsible for the safe and secure operation and management of the distribution system. DSOs are also responsible for the planning and development of the distribution system. |
Transmission system operator (TSO) | A legal entity responsible for operating, developing, and maintaining the transmission system for a specific zone and, where apposite, its interconnections with other systems, and for guaranteeing the long-term ability of the system to meet reasonable demands for the transmission of electricity. |
Government/Regulator | The regulator must strengthen competition and ensure that this does not compromise security of supply and sustainability. To act even-handedly in the interests of all market participants, regulators must be politically and financially independent. |
Category | Example |
---|---|
Distributed energy resource systems: micro-generators | Electricity: - Photovoltaic solar systems - Wind turbines Electricity and heat: - Micro cogeneration units - Fuel cells - Hybrid and fuel cell electric vehicles (FCEVs) - Solar heating and cooling |
Distributed energy resource systems: energy storage | Electricity: - Batteries (household or neighborhood size) - Electrolyzers Heat: - In home hot water storage - Storage heaters - Shared storage in buildings or neighborhoods - Ground, aquifers, phase-change materials, thermochemical materials, etc. |
Responsive appliances | - Electric vehicles (Battery) - Heat pumps - Air conditioners - Dish washers - Washing machines - Clothes dryers - Freezer/refrigerator - Battery operated home appliances robots (vacuum cleaners, kitchen appliances) - 3D printers, robot arms - Close-in boilers |
Smart/digital meters | - Electricity meters (frequency ranges from seconds to day intervals) - Gas meters - Meters that allow for breakdown to appliance level (usually part of a monitoring and control system) |
Energy monitoring and control systems | - Sensors and energy monitoring systems, ranging from household aggregate to breakdown to appliance level - Gas measurement, often combined with a smart thermostat |
Home automation for smart energy use | - Energy services gateways - Apps - Steering of deferrable load (smart appliances) - Home automation and control - Internet of things - Smart plugs and smart battery chargers (lighting, USB grids, etc.) |
Resource Type | Availability | Reaction Time | Duration |
---|---|---|---|
PV System | Depends on weather and time of day | seconds | Depends on weather and time of the day |
Heat pumps | Fully available until temperature criterion of household is met | seconds | Fully available until temperature criterion of household is met |
White goods and appliances | Customer dependent | seconds | Process dependent (non-interruptible) |
Wet appliances | Customer dependent | seconds | Appliance dependent |
Thermal storages | Fully available until temperature criterion is met | seconds | Limited by maximum battery capacity |
Battery electric vehicles (EV) | Customer dependent | seconds | Limited by maximum battery capacity and customer |
Fuel cell electric vehicles (FCEV) | Customer dependent | seconds | Limited by tank capacity, contrary to EV, tank fills as fast as 4 min |
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Reinders, A.; Übermasser, S.; Van Sark, W.; Gercek, C.; Schram, W.; Obinna, U.; Lehfuss, F.; Van Mierlo, B.; Robledo, C.; Van Wijk, A. An Exploration of the Three-Layer Model Including Stakeholders, Markets and Technologies for Assessments of Residential Smart Grids. Appl. Sci. 2018, 8, 2363. https://doi.org/10.3390/app8122363
Reinders A, Übermasser S, Van Sark W, Gercek C, Schram W, Obinna U, Lehfuss F, Van Mierlo B, Robledo C, Van Wijk A. An Exploration of the Three-Layer Model Including Stakeholders, Markets and Technologies for Assessments of Residential Smart Grids. Applied Sciences. 2018; 8(12):2363. https://doi.org/10.3390/app8122363
Chicago/Turabian StyleReinders, Angèle, Stefan Übermasser, Wilfried Van Sark, Cihan Gercek, Wouter Schram, Uchechi Obinna, Felix Lehfuss, Barbara Van Mierlo, Carla Robledo, and Ad Van Wijk. 2018. "An Exploration of the Three-Layer Model Including Stakeholders, Markets and Technologies for Assessments of Residential Smart Grids" Applied Sciences 8, no. 12: 2363. https://doi.org/10.3390/app8122363