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Smart Grids in Ireland : Cooperation opportunities fo r Germany and Ireland. Roadmap Smart Grids. Jan Zacharias German Association of Energy and Water Industries Dublin, 6 May 2014. Agenda. German Association of Energy and Water Industries. Roadmap Smart Grids.
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Smart Grids in Ireland: Cooperationopportunitiesfor Germany andIreland Roadmap Smart Grids • Jan Zacharias • German Association of Energy and Water Industries • Dublin, 6 May 2014
Agenda German AssociationofEnergyandWater Industries Roadmap Smart Grids Cooperationopportunitiesfor Germany andIreland
Leading Association of the energy and water industries 1,908 member companies representing 90% of electricity sales 90% of natural gas sales 65% of local and district heat supply 80% of drinking water abstraction 30% of wastewater disposal 95 % of the persons employed in the energy and water industries 95 % of the investments of the energy and water industries The total sector stands for a turnover of 130 billion Euros.** * Data for 2012; ** Turnover from electricity and drinking water sales to end consumers as well as from end consumers‘ wastewater disposal
What does the BDEW offer? Platform/Network Speaking in one voice Exchange of views/information • Committee work • Topical Newsletters • Events, seminars Pooling of interests • Position statements • Studies/expert opinions • Statistics/data, analyses Representation of interests to politics, business and public • Dialogue with politics • Press and public relations Advice,support • Application and implementation guides • Model contracts, sector guidelines and recommended action
National and international cooperations (examples) Federal authorities BNetzA (Federal Network Agency) BAfA (Federal Office of Economics and Exports Control)
Agenda German AssociationofEnergyandWater Industries Roadmap Smart Grids Cooperationopportunitiesfor Germany andIreland
What is a smart grid? • A smart grid is an energy network that integrates consumption and feed-in behavior of all market participants connected to it. • It ensures an economically efficient, sustainable power system with low losses and high availability. Figure 1: Components of smart grids (BDEW)
3 phases with 10 steps to a smart grid in Germany a … Figure 2: 10 Stepstowards smart grids in Germany (BDEW, Eurelectricbasis)
Step 1: Separation and interaction of market and network Who? • All marketparticipants (systematicapproach) What? • Rulingsanddivisionofwork / definitionofinterfacesbetweenregulated & competitiveplayers When? • Start 2013 Figure 3: Traffic lightconcept (BDEW)
Step 2: Legal and regulatory framework Who? • Federal Government • Bundestag • Federal Network Agency What? • Consistent EnWG/EEG • Configurationthroughoutordinances • Takingaccountof EU legislationandtelecommunicationregulation When? • Immediately Figure 4: Legal andregulatoryframework (BDEW)
Step 3: Research and development, pilot projects Who? • Energysuppliers • ICT developers / manufacturers • Research institutions What? • R&D • Pilot anddemonstrationprojects(publicly & privatelyfunded) • Evaluation & Communication When? • Upuntil 2018 Figure 5: Distribution networktoday/tomorrow (BDEW)
Steps 4 to 6: Standards, measurement & automation Who? • Standardisation institutions • DSO andmeteroperators • Manufacturers, associations What? • Definition ofrulesandregulation • Market communication • Installation of smart meteringandcontrolsystems • Automation ofnetworks When? • Continuouslyuntil 2020 Figure 6: Sensor technology in thenetwork (BDEW)
Step 7: Local & global optimisation of the energy system Who? • DSO, TSO • Suppliers, aggregators • Storage operators, consumers What? • Coordinationoftechnicaloptimisation (local, global) • Coordinationofeconomicoptimisationbetweenmarketparticipants Wann? • From 2014 Figure 7: Interactions betweenlocalandcentralmarketparticipants (BDEW)
Step 8: Storage and electromobility Who? • Generators • DSO, TSO • Energyserviceproviders, suppliers What? • Time-relatedbalancebetweenenergysupplyanddemand. Stabilisation ofenergysupplybyprovisionof services in the energy network. When? • First stepsfrom 2018 Figure 8: Power to gas principle (BDEW)
Steps 9 and 10: Supply and Demand Side Management Who? • Generators • DSO, TSO • Suppliers, aggregators, storagefacilityoperators What? • Temporal balance between generation and consumption • Development ofcommercialdemand-responseprogrammes When? • From 2014 Figure 9: Potential andmarketproximity in the smart grid (BDEW)
Agenda German AssociationofEnergyandWater Industries Roadmap Smart Grids Cooperationopportunitiesfor Germany andIreland
Different, but nevertheless close beer & Oktoberfest moresheepthaninhabitants Guinness autobahnwithoutspeedlimit weakening tiger economy „Energiewende“ the German way Mme Merkel rainyweatheratany time oftheyear
Pillars for cooperation Development and pioneer phase • European standards • Research & development Establishment and configuration phase • Business contacts • Exchange of experience Realisation and marketing phase • Information and communication technology • Cross-border markets for flexibility
Jan Zacharias • German Association of Energy and Water Industries • Reinhardstraße 32 • 10117 Berlin • Phone: +49 30 300 199 1113 • Mail: jan.zacharias@bdew.de • www.bdew.de