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Colin Bennett

Electricity 2.0: Smart grid will bring internet-like energy revolution - 0 views

  • Not surprisingly, this intelligent, interconnected network is by no means a straightforward proposition. It has a lengthy ingredients list, and so requires extensive deployments to make it work: The most obvious component is the smart meter, which stores detailed data on energy usage and transmits and receives information, acting as the communications “gateway” into the home. On top of this, a new communications network needs to be built. Operating in parallel with the electricity grid, this network distributes data between all elements of the new intelligent grid. In the distribution and transmission network, advanced utility sensors and control systems need to be deployed in wires and substations. Such a network then provides the sensors and controls that will improve the system’s resilience. The final element is software. This is required to present, interpret, analyse and react to the huge amount of data that will consequently be flowing through the system.
Pannir selvam

Blog | IBBK - The Biogas Network - 3 views

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    German network for international biogas , world network
Hans De Keulenaer

Railway Gazette: UltraCaps win out in energy storage - 0 views

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    REGENERATIVE BRAKING is widely practised, but there have to be other trains around to absorb the surplus power being fed back into the catenary or third rail. Processing the output from trains and pushing it back into the local grid is possible with an AC power supply, but very expensive with DC traction. Too often, power produced by traction motors in braking mode ends up heating resistor banks. The elegant alternative is to store the braking energy on the train. This not only avoids the electrical complications of regenerating through the traction power supply network. It reduces the rated power requirement of that network by lopping demand peaks during acceleration, saves energy by reducing losses in the catenary or conductor rail, and by limiting voltage drop it allows substations to be further apart. NiMH batteries have the necessary energy storage density in terms of kWh/kg, and are slightly more expensive, but their life in terms of charge/discharge cycles in no way matches the LRV requirement for 2million cycles over 10 years. Flywheels have been tried but never caught on for several reasons.
Hans De Keulenaer

Measuring energy use and behaviour change in the home | Housing network | Guardian Prof... - 0 views

  • Staff from the university have been working in partnership with a social landlord in the north-west of England to examine how new tenants of five typical, semi-detached three-bedroom properties respond to a range of interventions to make them more energy aware – and use the energy within their homes more wisely – over a period of two years.
Hans De Keulenaer

T2419.pdf (application/pdf Object) - 0 views

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    The report presents how climate will change according to climate models concerning the planning and building of electric power networks from the present state to the period from 2016 to 2045. The essential impacts of changes in weather conditions on planning and building of electric network are defined regionally based on the climate change scenarios. The importance of the effects is shown as costs and failure durations for different line structures. Moreover, the influence of the climate change on the loading capacity of the power system components is presented. On the basis of all these factors it will be judged how strong an effect the climate change has in the present electric power network and how one should be prepared for it.
Colin Bennett

More Energy-Efficient Communications Networks - 0 views

  • Their aim is to reduce energy utilization of communications networks by a factor of 1,000 for every consumer from current levels. Gee Rittenhouse is the head of research at Alcatel-Lucent (NYSE: ALU) Bell Laboratories. According to him, “It is a really very aggressive schedule. We have five years to demonstrate these technologies.”
Energy Net

Smart grid and renewables interconnection (Part 4 of 5) - 0 views

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    One of the reasons why smart grid is generating so much interest right now is its ability to enable the integration of renewable energy into the electric power network, leading to a broader generation portfolio and potentially beneficial carbon implications. Lots of the discussion of smart grid in policy and media (including places like Greentech Media, Cleantech, EcoGeek, GreenMonk, and the New York Times blogs Dot Earth and Green Inc.) has emphasized the potential economic and environmental value from having investments in the electric power network that make the accommodation of renewables easier, reducing transaction costs and shifting the margin at which investing in renewables is profitable.
Colin Bennett

EcoGeek - Technology for the Environment - 0 views

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    seems like just yesterday I was talking about smart grid stuff. There's more news: Tendril Networks, a smart grid start-up, has announced all the goods on its networked in-home energy display, called Tendril Residential Energy Ecosystem (TREE).
Hans De Keulenaer

Wind Power Need Not Be Backed Up By An Equal Amount Of Reserve Power - 0 views

  • The production of wind power varies and is harder to forecast than the fluctuations in electricity demand.
  • The results indicate that the frequently stated claim of wind power requiring an equal amount of reserve power for back-up is not correct. A substantial adjustment tolerance is already built in to our power network, and the impacts of wind power fluctuations can be further balanced through a variety of measures.
  • The impact of a large share of wind power can be controlled by appropriate grid connection requirements, extension and enforcement of transmission networks as well as integration of wind power production and production forecasts into system and market operation. The state-of-the-art report presents the assessments of the impact of wind power on the reliability and costs of the power system conducted in different countries.
davidchapman

Falling 10GbE Prices Spell Doom for Fibre Channel - 0 views

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    This article suggests that 10Gb ethernet (copper) is about to take over the (optical) fibre channel for storage area networks. Caution: these networks are usually physically small and dense so cable lengths are short. The added value is high enough to justify the costs (Cost per switsch port still ~100 times higher than 1Gb, tricky cable installation).The comments at the end of the article that imply that 10Gb will be common are unconvincing.
Phil Slade

Sustainable Energy Academy - 3 views

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    "The Sustainable Energy Academy promotes education and action to reduce the carbon footprint of buildings and communities. We are currently spearheading Old Home SuperHome - a network of exemplar, old dwellings which have undergone an energy-efficiency retrofit. We aim to create a network of homes that are local and publicly accessible, within 15 minutes, to nearly everyone in the country."
Hans De Keulenaer

Blackouts and Cascading Failures of the Global Markets: Scientific American - 0 views

  • Cascading failures are an emergent phenomenon of a network, rather than the independent and coincidental failures of its individual components. Although it is true that many banks in the U.S. and Europe simultaneously overinvested in mortgage-backed securities (MBSs) to their peril, positive feedbacks in the global economic system amplified those errors. Bank regulators and macroeconomic policymakers have focused too much attention on the individual nodes of the network (that is, on each bank, and each national economy) without proper regard for the system-wide amplification.
davidchapman

Linux design targets 802.11n-enabled homes - 0 views

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    This is a reference hardware design to add wireless capability to 'any' electronic consumer device. This is important because the availability of designs such as this will drive the networking path for smart homes. This is the first I have seen and it is wireless.
Colin Bennett

Italian Town Runs On 100% Renewable Power : MetaEfficient - 0 views

  • Varese, a town in Northern Italy, runs on 100% renewable power. The town uses a mix of wind, solar and small-scale hydropower. The town has reaped benefits from the energy network through added jobs, and an additional 350,000 euros [US $514,000] in tax revenues which is handed over to the council each year. Varese has also seen a six-fold increase in tourists in the last ten years, many coming just to see its renewable energy network.
Colin Bennett

» Smarter homes with an Amigo | Emerging Technology Trends | ZDNet.com - 0 views

  • I’m sure that some of you remember Jini, an initiative launched in 1998 by Bill Joy of Sun Microsystems. This software was supposed to turn all the devices we use into ‘network citizens,’ as Joy said. It never really worked. And even if the electronic devices we own are increasingly network compatible, they still are unable to work together intelligently. This is why the European Union has funded a project to allow your fridge or your TV to communicate with your phone or your PC. This project, named Amigo, will end in February 2008 and was granted €13 millions by the EU. This project enrolled powerful partners such as France Telecom, Microsoft or Philips which pay the rest of the bill, expected to reach €23 millions. The researchers think their approach will be successful because it’s an entirely open source project and everyone can participate. But read more…
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    effciency connectivity
Jeff Johnson

Engineering a Smart Grid For Energy's Future - washingtonpost.com - 0 views

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    The process, Current says, lets a utility more efficiently manage the distribution of electricity by allowing two-way communication between consumers and energy suppliers via the broadband network on the power lines. Based on data they receive from hundreds of homes, utilities can monitor usage and adjust output and pricing in response to demand. Consumers can be rewarded with reduced rates by cutting back on consumption during peak periods. And computerized substations can talk to each other so overloaded circuits hand off electricity to underused ones, helping to prevent blackouts.
Phil Slade

CUEN | Driving Change: Energy and Transportation in the 21st Century - 0 views

shared by Phil Slade on 23 May 10 - Cached
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    "CUEN presents the 4th Annual Energy Conference Tuesday, 22nd June 2010 Driving Change: Energy and Transportation in the 21st Century The Cambridge University Energy Network was established to bring together the academic community to share their knowledge and interest in the generation and consumption of energy. It also serves to promote a structured, cross disciplinary approach to teaching and research in sustainable energy."
Hans De Keulenaer

Healey: Building momentum for homes of the future | webnewswire.com - 0 views

  • The proposals launched today outline how those emissions can be reduced both on and off site, including through community scale low carbon heat production for district networks.
  • Non-domestic buildings often have greater potential for onsite renewables (e.g. more roof space) and to play a critical role in the viability of community heat or energy networks.
Hans De Keulenaer

FT.com / Special Reports - The case for investing in 'smart grids' - 0 views

  • Many politicians are supportive, not least Barack Obama, the US president, who in October promised $3.4bn in grants to pay for smart grid equipment.However, an investment on that scale does no more than lay the foundations: a full smart grid for the US will require an investment that is orders of magnitude greater. The commercial and regulatory framework to deliver that investment has not yet been developed.
  • The epithet “smart” can be applied to a wide range of network technologies. But among industry leaders, there is broad agreement about what a smart grid entails: the use of intelligent devices at all points in the electricity network, from the high-voltage transmission lines to appliances in the home, that can send information and receive instructions.
Colin Bennett

Malta to Become First Smart Grid Island - 0 views

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    PG&E may be installing millions of smart meters in Northern California, but the nation of Malta (pop. 400,000) is about to become the world's first smart grid island. IBM is building the island's national smart grid network, which will consist of 250,000 smart meters placed in homes around the country.
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