1 / 18

Focus Group on Smart Grid

Workshop on Focus Group on Smart Grid (Geneva, 9 January 2012). Focus Group on Smart Grid. Hiroshi Ota ITU/TSB. Outline. Smart Grid – general aspects Focus Group on Smart Grid. Smart Grid Overview - A conceptual model. Source: National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST).

maxwells
Download Presentation

Focus Group on Smart Grid

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Workshop on Focus Group on Smart Grid(Geneva, 9 January 2012) Focus Group on Smart Grid Hiroshi Ota ITU/TSB

  2. Outline Smart Grid – general aspects Focus Group on Smart Grid

  3. Smart Grid Overview - A conceptual model Source: National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)

  4. Smart Grid benefit: cut peak load • Through AMI (Advanced Metering Infrastructure) – two way communication • Demand/response: cut energy use during times of peak demand • Dynamic pricing: encourages to reduce power consumption voluntarily during peak period

  5. Smart Grid benefit: Integrating renewable energy • Output of renewable energy sources (wind, solar ...) varies • makes integration with conventional power grid difficult • Smart Grid: • Wide-Area Situational Awareness • Electric vehicles-to-grid (load and electric storage)

  6. Expectations Sources: Pike Research, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory / U.S. Department of Energy Smart Grid investment to total $200 billion worldwide by 2015 At 100% Smart Grid deployment in U.S.: 12% reduction in annual electrical energy production and resulting CO2 emissions by 2030

  7. Advanced Metering Infrastructure * Source: http://www.onworld.com/html/newssmartmeter.htm • “… 100 million new smart meters are planned to be installed worldwide within the next five years. Almost half of these will have a Home Area Network (HAN) gateway for in-home energy management programs and services.” • ITU-T standards: • ITU-T G.9960 series (known as G.hn) – broadband for any type of in-home wire • ITU-T G.9950 series (known as G.hnem) – narrowband PLC for Smart Grid (AMI, PEV, home automation, etc.)

  8. Smart Grid for sub-Saharan Africa Details are at: http://ourworld.unu.edu/en/smart-and-just-grids-options-for-sub-saharan-africa/ • In 2009: 70% of Sub-saharan Africa population had no access to electricity • Green field approach: leapfrog traditional power systems • In short term: leapfrogging to occur for components based on ICT

  9. Mitigation of climate change and improve energy efficiency Study done by University of Genoa Report will be available as a TSAG TD

  10. The need for Smart Grid standards • “The recent surge in enthusiasm for the Smart Grid is fine… but if it is not implemented with discipline and cooperation it will struggle even to reach mediocrity.” • “Plug-and-Work” architecture needed, based on • open standards, • functional requirements, • best practices, • business policies, • reference designs and implementations • Standards and interoperability are vital

  11. Outline Smart Grid – general aspects Focus Group on Smart Grid

  12. ITU-T Focus Groups Quick development of specifications in chosen areas Addressing industry needs Participation is open Recent FG success story: Focus Group ICT & Climate Change (July 2008-April 2009)

  13. Establishment of FG Smart Grid Management Team When? ITU-T TSAG agreed at its meeting in Geneva, 8-11 February 2010 to establish ITU-T Focus Group on Smart Grid (FG Smart)

  14. Organization of FG Smart FG Smart Plenary Ad hoc Deliverable: Smart Grid Overview Deliverable: Terminology Editor: Gyu Myoung Lee (ETRI, Korea) Editor: Yuan Guangxiang (CATR, China) WG3 Architecture WG1 Use cases WG2 Requirements Chair: Hyung-Soo Kim (KT, Korea) Editor: Gyu Myoung Lee (ETRI, Korea) Editor: Jeong Yun KIM (ETRI, Korea) Chair: David Su (NIST) Editor: Tsuyoshi Masuo (NTT, Japan) Editor: Yoshihiro Kondo (NTT, Japan) Chair: Yoshito Sakurai (Hitachi, Japan) Vice-chair: Haihua Li (CATR, China) Editor: Shingo Soma(Mitsubishi, Japan) Editor: Jian Li (CATR, China) Deliverable: Smart Grid Architecture Deliverable: use cases for smart grid Deliverable: Requirements of communication for smart grid

  15. FG Smart Current Activities Meetings • 1st meeting: 14-16 June 2010, Geneva • 2nd meeting: 2-5 Aug 2010, Geneva • 3rd meeting: 11-15 Oct 2010, Geneva • 4th meeting: 29 Nov-3 Dec 2010, Chicago, USA • 5th meeting: 10-14 Jan 2011, Yokohama, Japan • 6th meeting: 4-8 Apr 2011, Sophia Antipolis, France • 7th meeting: 9-15 Jun 2011, Jeju Island, Korea • 8th meeting: 22-26 August 2011, Geneva • 9th meeting: 18-21 December 2011, Geneva Related information is at: • http://ifa.itu.int/t/fg/smart/docs/ • http://www.itu.int/en/ITU-T/focusgroups/smart/Pages/Default.aspx

  16. Collaboration is essential • Avoid duplication of effort • More than 25 related organizations invited to the first meeting, e.g. • National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), • Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), • International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC)

  17. Next steps • Five deliverables were finalized and submitted to TSAG as parts of the FG’s report (TD315). • Future direction will be decided at the TSAG • Mechanism/organization to progress standardization • Items for standardization • Collaboration with other organization

  18. Thank you! Hiroshi.ota@itu.int

More Related