Optimized Water Demand Management Through Intelligent Sensing And Analytics: The WISDOM Approach


Autoria(s): McCann, Julie A; Ellis, Keith A; Rezgui, Yacine; Zarli, Alain
Data(s)

01/08/2014

Resumo

New business and technology platforms are required to sustainably manage urban water resources [1,2]. However, any proposed solutions must be cognisant of security, privacy and other factors that may inhibit adoption and hence impact. The FP7 WISDOM project (funded by the European Commission - GA 619795) aims to achieve a step change in water and energy savings via the integration of innovative Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) frameworks to optimize water distribution networks and to enable change in consumer behavior through innovative demand management and adaptive pricing schemes [1,2,3]. The WISDOM concept centres on the integration of water distribution, sensor monitoring and communication systems coupled with semantic modelling (using ontologies, potentially connected to BIM, to serve as intelligent linkages throughout the entire framework) and control capabilities to provide for near real-time management of urban water resources. Fundamental to this framework are the needs and operational requirements of users and stakeholders at domestic, corporate and city levels and this requires the interoperability of a number of demand and operational models, fed with data from diverse sources such as sensor networks and crowsourced information. This has implications regarding the provenance and trustworthiness of such data and how it can be used in not only the understanding of system and user behaviours, but more importantly in the real-time control of such systems. Adaptive and intelligent analytics will be used to produce decision support systems that will drive the ability to increase the variability of both supply and consumption [3]. This in turn paves the way for adaptive pricing incentives and a greater understanding of the water-energy nexus. This integration is complex and uncertain yet being typical of a cyber-physical system, and its relevance transcends the water resource management domain. The WISDOM framework will be modeled and simulated with initial testing at an experimental facility in France (AQUASIM – a full-scale test-bed facility to study sustainable water management), then deployed and evaluated in in two pilots in Cardiff (UK) and La Spezia (Italy). These demonstrators will evaluate the integrated concept providing insight for wider adoption.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://academicworks.cuny.edu/cc_conf_hic/456

http://academicworks.cuny.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1455&context=cc_conf_hic

Idioma(s)

English

Publicador

CUNY Academic Works

Fonte

International Conference on Hydroinformatics

Palavras-Chave #2014 International Conference on Hydroinformatics HIC #Case Studies #Water awareness #monitoring and management #User-Centered Predictive Platform #ICT #R53 #Water Distribution Networks Operations and Sensor Placement #Environmental Sciences #Physical Sciences and Mathematics #Water Resource Management
Tipo

presentation