présentations de la Délégation générale Société de l’Information à la délégation d’Aquitains conduite par AEC, 30 janvier 2012:
les réseaux intelligents (smart grid)
Europe 2014-2020: smart grid (réseaux intelligents)
1. Smart Grid Communications for Europe
Rencontre de représentants de la région Aquitaine
Colette Maloney, PhD
Head of ICT for Sustainable Growth Unit
30 January 2012
Directorate-General Information Society and Media
European Commission
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3. Europe 2020 – The EU economic and
reform package
“Europe 2020 is about what we need to do
today and tomorrow to get the economy back
on track. We need to build a new economy
based on knowledge, low-carbon and high
employment levels”
Reafirms the energy and climate targets:
20% of renewable energy in the overall EU’s energy mix
20% efficiency gains compared to previsions
20% reduction of the GHG emissions
http://ec.europa.eu/europe2020/index_en.htm
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4. Research and Policy
Information Society
and Media
Energy
Research
Source : SAP (2009)
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5. EC Funding Opportunities for RTD
The European Commission funds a whole series of projects dealing
with different angles of smart grid technologies under the 7th research
and technological development framework programme (FP7).
WORK PROGRAMME 2011 – 12 COOPERATION - THEME 3
ICT – INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATIONS TECHNOLOGIES
ftp://ftp.cordis.europa.eu/pub/fp7/ict/docs/ict-wp-2011-12_en.pdf
WORK PROGRAMME 2011 COOPERATION - THEME 5
ENERGY
ftp://ftp.cordis.europa.eu/pub/fp7/docs/wp/cooperation/energy/e-wp-2011
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6. Key Research Objectives for
Smart Energy Grids (1)
Research Challenges:
• Strengthening the distribution grid by providing control systems,
management and decision support tools that enable the integration of
renewable sources
• Advancing security and reliability, as well as protection of equipment,
fault detection and alert, and self-healing through development of the
necessary high power electronics
• Data management infrastructures to allow electricity production and
consumption to be measured, reported and controlled (and eventually
credited or billed)
• Home energy controlling hubs that will collect real-time or near real-time
data on energy consumption data from smart household appliances and
enable intelligent automation
• Building consensus on industry-driven open standards to ensure the
interoperability of smart grids control and management systems
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7. Key Research Objectives for
Smart Energy Grids (2)
Expected Impact:
• Connection and operation of distributed and intermittent generators of
diverse technologies enabled by ICT
• Demand side and demand response management enabled by
innovative decision support systems
• Producers and consumers allowed to play a novel role in the
management of their energy consumption
• Quantifiable and significant reductions of energy consumption in the
electricity distribution grid, leading to reduction of the overall
environmental impact of electricity grids
• Enhanced levels of reliability and security of electricity supply
• Reinforced collaboration between the European electricity suppliers
and distributors, energy equipment manufacturers of all sizes, and the
ICT sector.
Call closed on January 17th 2012 – Work-Programme 2013 will include new opportunities
to further advance these challenges.
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8. Smart Energy Services (CEF proposal, 2014-2020)
Projects of common interest for digital services infrastructure:
Core Services
• efficiency of the smart grid
• smooth operation of the energy grid - system efficiency, security,
resiliency, reliability
Generic Services
• improving the grid operations and energy savings of the users
• management of the energy demand
• optimization of the usage of renewable resources
• offer energy storage through the potential of renewable sources
Applications
• reducing costs and optimized usage of the energy grid
• access to the information regarding the energy consumption
• monitoring energy usage data, control of home appliances, increase
the home and building energy efficiency
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