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Innovation and Disruption at the Grid’s Edge

How Distributed Energy Resources are Disrupting the Utility Business Model

Specificaties
Paperback, blz. | Engels
Elsevier Science | e druk, 2017
ISBN13: 9780128117583
Rubricering
Elsevier Science e druk, 2017 9780128117583
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Samenvatting

Innovation and Disruption at the Grid’s Edge examines the viable developments in peer-to-peer transactions enabled by open platforms on the grid’s edge. With consumers and prosumers using more electronic platforms to trade surplus electricity from rooftop solar panels, share a storage battery, or use smart gadgets that manage load and self-generation, the grid's edge is becoming crowded.

The book examines the growing number of consumers engaging in self-generation and storage, and analyzes the underlying causes and drivers of change, as well as the implications of how the utility sector—particularly the distribution network—should/could be regulated. The book also explores how tariffs are set and revenues are collected to cover both fixed and variable costs in a sustainable way. This reference is useful for anyone interested in the areas of energy generation and regulation, especially stakeholders engaged in the generation, transmission, and distribution of power.

Specificaties

ISBN13:9780128117583
Taal:Engels
Bindwijze:Paperback

Inhoudsopgave

<p>Part I: Envisioning alternative futures <br>1. Innovation & disruption at the “grid’s edge”<br>2. Innovation, disruption and the survival of the fittest<br>3. The great rebalancing act: Rattling the electricity value chain from behind the meter<br>4. Beyond community solar:  Aggregating local distributed resources for resilience and sustainability<br>5. Grid vs. distributed solar: What does Australia’s experience say about the competitiveness of distributed energy?<br>6. Powering the driverless electric car of the future<br>7. Regulations, barriers and opportunities to the growth of DERs in the Spanish power sector<br>8. Quintessential innovation for transformation of the power sector</p> <p>Part II. Enabling future innovations <br>9. Bringing DERs into the mainstream: Regulations, innovation and disruption at the grid’s edge<br>10. Public policy issues associated with feed-in-tariffs and net metering:  An Australian perspective <br>11. We don’t need a new business model: “It ain’t broke and it don’t need fixin”<br>12. Towards dynamic network tariffs: A proposal for Spain<br>13. Internet of Things and the economics of microgrids</p> <p>Part III. Alternative business models <br>14. Access rights and consumer protection in a distributed energy system<br>15. The transformation of the German electricity sector and the emergence of new business models in distributed energy systems<br>16. Peer-to-peer energy matching: Transparency, choice and locational grid pricing<br>17. Virtual power plants: Bringing the flexibility of decentralized loads and generation to power markets<br>18. Integrated community-based energy systems: Aligning technology, incentives and regulations<br>19. Solar grid parity and its impact on the grid</p>

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        Innovation and Disruption at the Grid’s Edge