Event: Future Internet Week, BudapestDate: May 16 – 20, 2011Presenter: Werner Mohr Smart Energy needs Smart Information Technology Smart Information Technology.

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Presentation transcript:

Event: Future Internet Week, BudapestDate: May 16 – 20, 2011Presenter: Werner Mohr Smart Energy needs Smart Information Technology Smart Information Technology needs a Future Internet EU FP7 FI PPP FINSENY (Future Internet for Smart Energy) Presented by Werner Mohr – Nokia Siemens Networks – on behalf of the FINSENY project

2 Event: Future Internet Week, BudapestDate: May 16 – 20, 2011Presenter: Werner Mohr Outline Key drivers for smart energy and project motivation Problem statement Consortium Creating a wider community Objectives Scenarios Potential trial sites Conclusions

3 Event: Future Internet Week, BudapestDate: May 16 – 20, 2011Presenter: Werner Mohr Key Driver: Integration of Renewables

4 Event: Future Internet Week, BudapestDate: May 16 – 20, 2011Presenter: Werner Mohr Key Driver: New Business Scenarios Energy Supplier Energy Supplier plus Service Provider

5 Event: Future Internet Week, BudapestDate: May 16 – 20, 2011Presenter: Werner Mohr solar wind geothermal biomass gas oil coal nuclear water volatile! Key Challenge: Volatility

6 Event: Future Internet Week, BudapestDate: May 16 – 20, 2011Presenter: Werner Mohr Key Challenge: Volatility geothermal solar biomass wind water Renewable Energies in Germany, PJ/a volatile!

Event: Future Internet Week, BudapestDate: May 16 – 20, 2011Presenter: Werner Mohr movable loads electric vehicles storages businesses industry private homes Ability to manage production and consumption is a prerequisite to achieve renewable power supply. Managing Generation and Consumption

8 Event: Future Internet Week, BudapestDate: May 16 – 20, 2011Presenter: Werner Mohr Project motivation In search of a sustainable energy system –limit climate change –replace nuclear power generation Renewable & decentralised energy generation –need to cope with volatility –need to optimally use existing grid infrastructures Liberalisation of energy markets –new services –new market roles Combination of action fields –smart grid and smart home –smart grid and electric mobility –… ICT is the key enabler for the smart energy world!

9 Event: Future Internet Week, BudapestDate: May 16 – 20, 2011Presenter: Werner Mohr Smart energy landscape smart grids

10 Event: Future Internet Week, BudapestDate: May 16 – 20, 2011Presenter: Werner Mohr Problem statement Planning of future energy supply means defining optimum trade-offs between reliability, sustainability and costs in light of requirements and external conditions These challenges impact directly user needs and aspirations: –Access to energy whenever and wherever required –Acquire electricity at reasonable and predictable prices –Energy is used efficiently, in public buildings, factories, enterprises, households –Make use of innovative services and applications that offer easier, more comfortable and sustainable means of managing energy consumption –Use electric vehicles in every European country – Easily set up own small scale energy generator, based on regenerative resources – Build energy autonomous neighbourhoods, without permanent connection to centralized energy system – Confidence in reliable and secure energy system to maintain privacy of information

11 Event: Future Internet Week, BudapestDate: May 16 – 20, 2011Presenter: Werner Mohr Major European partners joined the FINSENY consortium

12 Event: Future Internet Week, BudapestDate: May 16 – 20, 2011Presenter: Werner Mohr Smart Grid Stakeholder Group Members Positioning in Smart Energy landscape

13 Event: Future Internet Week, BudapestDate: May 16 – 20, 2011Presenter: Werner Mohr Strategic Goals – Foster Europe’s leadership in ICT solutions for Smart Energy – Team-up ICT and Energy sectors to coordinate common activities, to develop and to demonstrate outstanding European technologies and solutions – Optimise sustainability, reliability and cost-efficiency of energy supply – Contribute to implementing European Energy policies Project Objectives – Analysis of scenarios, identification of requirements, and development of reference architectures – Identification of generic enablers, together with the other FI-PPP projects – Provision of selected domain-specific enablers – Preparation of pan-European use case trials – Development of a cross-industry standardisation strategy Success Factors – Develop and maintain the Cross-Industry information exchange with European community, building on our established “Smart Grid Stakeholder Group” – Closely cooperate with other FI-PPP projects – Closely cooperate with other national/European Smart Energy and FI projects FINSENY Goals, Objectives and Success Factors FINSENY Goals, Objectives and Success Factors

14 Event: Future Internet Week, BudapestDate: May 16 – 20, 2011Presenter: Werner Mohr Selected scenarios in the project Distribution network Regional-/Microgrid Smart Buildings Electric Mobility Electronic market place for energy

15 Event: Future Internet Week, BudapestDate: May 16 – 20, 2011Presenter: Werner Mohr Supervision and control of all active components in the Distribution Network, e.g. to assure power quality even with high percentage of renewable energy Supervision and Control of primary substations and their periphery only Indirect fault detection and vague fault localization Extensive use of sensor data and of an ICT-based control infrastructure for fast fault detection, precise fault localization and automatic restoration FINSENY In particular for Microgrid: Island control only for object networks (small-scale) and transmission systems (large- scale) Independent operation in case of macrogrid connection-loss, assurance of power quality even with high percentage of renewable energy generation FINSENY – Scenarios “Distribution Network” & “Microgrid”

16 Event: Future Internet Week, BudapestDate: May 16 – 20, 2011Presenter: Werner Mohr Legacy buildings cannot easily be equipped with today’s ICT technologies for building automation FINSENY together with the Technology Foundation will provide suitable ICT technologies for building automation even in legacy buildings Separation of Building Management System (BMS) and ICT infrastructure Integration of BMS and ICT allows for efficient energy management. Availability of additional context data for BMS FINSENY High Complexity of configuring building management systems, experts know-how required Self-management of ICT infrastructure and BMS; minimal manual programming of optimization engines, e.g. using multi-agent systems FINSENY – Scenarios “Smart Building”

17 Event: Future Internet Week, BudapestDate: May 16 – 20, 2011Presenter: Werner Mohr Focus on single energy provider and national / small-scale scenarios  proprietary solutions Missing common solution for business-process interaction between all different actors of electric mobility Pan-European solution, involvement all energy providers (“roaming”), Full integration of energy management systems for electric mobility and the grid operation FINSENY Standardized ICT Support to enable Business-relationship handling between all actors of electric mobility throughout business domains FINSENY – Scenario “Electric Mobility”

18 Event: Future Internet Week, BudapestDate: May 16 – 20, 2011Presenter: Werner Mohr Current energy market dynamics is not accessible for many energy stakeholders. FINSENY Access to an extended virtual marketplace for all energy stakeholders. Today, energy trading happens with low granularity in terms of amount of energy and time Missing tools for all energy transactions being available to the energy stakeholders Advanced ICT Tools for enabling Energy Transactions: real-time, reliable, secure FINSENY – Scenario “Electronic Market Place for Energy”

19 Event: Future Internet Week, BudapestDate: May 16 – 20, 2011Presenter: Werner Mohr Potential trial sites

20 Event: Future Internet Week, BudapestDate: May 16 – 20, 2011Presenter: Werner Mohr Conclusion Conclusion for the Energy Domain –We must act now! The system must become smart(er)! –We need more ICT elements! –Some ICT elements are domain specific. Some can be supplied as generic enablers by the Future Internet core platform FINSENY will provide domain specific enablers in the ICT domain to integrate both sectors Demonstration projects show viability and help define the framework –EC funded: FENIX, BeAware, PREMIO, Web2Energy, SAVE ENERGY, ADDRESS etc. –national programs: E-Energy (DE), (IT), SG Model Regions (AT) –industry initiatives

21 Event: Future Internet Week, BudapestDate: May 16 – 20, 2011Presenter: Werner Mohr Business impact Siemens CEO Peter Löscher expects that –Smart Grids market alone –excluding intelligent energy generation and intelligent consumption/storage –Corresponds to a volume of 30 billion € –until 2014 Press conference, Salzburg, October 4, 2009 Christian Feißt, Head of Energy Supply CISCO –We currently expect in the area of Smart Grids –an annual market potential of 20 billion US- Spiegel online, : Vorwärts in die Schwarmstrom-Revolution. Von Stefan Schultz