903 resultados para Smart metering
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As smart grids e os smart meters, ou redes inteligentes e medidores inteligentes, respectivamente, estão cada vez mais próximos dos consumidores residenciais pelo mundo. Vários países vêm desenvolvendo estudos focados nos impactos decorrentes da introdução destas tecnologias. Uma das principais vantagens está relacionada à eficiência energética, ou conscientização da população em prol de um consumo mais eficiente. Estes benefícios são sentidos diretamente pelo consumidor através da economia nas contas de energia elétrica e pelas concessionárias através da minimização das perdas de transmissão e distribuição, estabilidade do sistema, menor carregamento nos horários de pico, entre outros. Neste artigo são apresentados dois projetos que demonstram o potencial de economia de energia através dos medidores inteligentes e das redes inteligentes. O primeiro realizado na Coreia, com foco na instalação de smart meters e o impacto da utilização de interfaces com o usuário. O segundo realizado em Portugal, com foco no controle das cargas em uma residência com geração distribuída.
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A Work Project, presented as part of the requirements for the Award of a Masters Degree in Management from the NOVA – School of Business and Economics
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Progettazione di un sistema di misura contactless per la tensione, da integrare in un nodo sensore di una Wireless Sensor Network per Smart Metering Distribuito
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Sono state valutate sperimentalmente le prestazioni di tre diversi collegamenti di Smart Metering in tre ambienti (urbano, sub-urbano e urbano denso) alla frequenza di 169 MHz. Grazie al calcolo del valore di Building Penetration Loss e dei valori di Path Loss è stato possibile stabilire le distanze massime di collegamento accentratore-meter al variare della probabilità di copertura.
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This paper proposes a process for the classifi cation of new residential electricity customers. The current state of the art is extended by using a combination of smart metering and survey data and by using model-based feature selection for the classifi cation task. Firstly, the normalized representative consumption profi les of the population are derived through the clustering of data from households. Secondly, new customers are classifi ed using survey data and a limited amount of smart metering data. Thirdly, regression analysis and model-based feature selection results explain the importance of the variables and which are the drivers of diff erent consumption profi les, enabling the extraction of appropriate models. The results of a case study show that the use of survey data signi ficantly increases accuracy of the classifi cation task (up to 20%). Considering four consumption groups, more than half of the customers are correctly classifi ed with only one week of metering data, with more weeks the accuracy is signifi cantly improved. The use of model-based feature selection resulted in the use of a signifi cantly lower number of features allowing an easy interpretation of the derived models.
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The present study deals with innovation diffusion as the central component of innovation process and takes smart meters as a concrete example from the electric power industry. Smart meters are seen as key enablers of the industry-wide shift towards smart grids and are recognized by the European Union as means of reaching its environmental and energy goals. However, the spread of smart meters through the market, especially in Central East Europe (CEE), is not corresponding to the expectations and identified benefits. The current work synthesizes available data for the under-researched geographical region of CEE and clarifies the process of smart meter diffusion and drivers behind it. In addition to innovation theories the methods applied are rate of adoption and thematic analysis. The results prove the large gap between optimal and actual diffusion as well as the lagging position of CEE in comparison to the EU’s market leaders. The smart metering market is driven from bottom-up and the majority of CEE countries have already carried out or started the initial activities. Therefore, in coming years more intensive smart meters deployment will be seen.
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Smart water metering technologies for residential buildings offer, in principle, great opportunities for sustainable urban water management. However, much of this potential is as yet unrealized. Despite that several ICT solutions have already been deployed aiming at optimum operations on the water utilities side (e.g. real time control for water networks, dynamic pump scheduling etc.), little work has been done to date on the consumer side. This paper presents a web-based platform targeting primarily the household end user. The platform enables consumers to monitor, on a real-time basis, the water demand of their household, providing feedback not only on the total water consumption and relevant costs but also on the efficiency (or otherwise) of specific indoor and outdoor uses. Targeting the reduction of consumption, the provided feedback is combined with notifications about possible leakages\bursts, and customised suggestions to improve the efficiency of existing household uses. It also enables various comparisons, with past consumption or even with that of similar households, aiming to motivate further the householder to become an active player in the water efficiency challenge. The issue of enhancing the platform’s functionality with energy timeseries is also discussed in view of recent advances in smart metering and the concept of “smart cities”. The paper presents a prototype of this web-based application and critically discusses first testing results and insights. It also presents the way in which the platform communicates with central databases, at the water utility level. It is suggested that such developments are closing the gap between technology availability and usefulness to end users and could help both the uptake of smart metering and awareness raising leading, potentially, to significant reductions of urban water consumption. The work has received funding from the European Union FP7 Programme through the iWIDGET Project, under grant agreement no318272.
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In Smart Grids, a variety of new applications are available to users of the electrical system (from consumers to the electric system operators and market operators). Some applications such as the SCADA systems, which control generators or substations, have consequences, for example, with a communication delay. The result of a failure to deliver a control message due to noncompliance of the time constraint can be catastrophic. On the other hand, applications such as smart metering of consumption have fewer restrictions. Since each type of application has different quality of service requirements (importance, delay, and amount of data to transmit) to transmit its messages, the policy to control and share the resources of the data communication network must consider them. In this paper Markov Decision Process Theory is employed to determine optimal policies to explore as much as possible the availability of throughput in order to transmit all kinds of messages, considering the quality of service requirements defined to each kind of message. First a non-preemptive model is formulated and after that a preemptive model is derived. Numerical results are used to compare FIFO, non-preemptive and preemptive policies.
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A forte preocupação ambiental, nomeadamente a emissão de Gases com Efeito de Estufa (GEE), aliada à constante ameaça do esgotamento dos combustíveis de origem fóssil, leva à necessidade de consumir energia de forma mais eficiente. Neste sentido, surge a promoção da eficiência energética nos diversos sectores consumidores de energia em todo o Mundo. Sabendo que passamos mais de 80% do nosso tempo dentro de edifícios, e que cerca de 40% da energia mundial é consumida nos mesmos [ADENE], é importante operar no sentido de promover a utilização racional de energia e incentivar ao consumo eficiente da mesma nos edifícios. Apesar do esforço que tem sido realizado a nível nacional, no sentido de melhorar a eficiência energética em edifícios de serviços, através da implementação de legislação diversa e de vários programas de incentivo, existem ainda várias lacunas a serem colmatadas e muito trabalho a fazer nesse sentido. Por tudo isto, e principalmente por ter constantemente em mente premissas como “a energia mais barata é aquela que não se consome” ou “não podemos gerir aquilo que não medimos”, surgiu a ideia de realizar esta dissertação, onde inicialmente através de dados provenientes de telecontagem se desenvolve uma tentativa de padronização/tipificação do consumo eléctrico em seis edifícios de escritórios, identificando-se assim algumas situações anómalas em diversos diagramas de carga construídos. Relaciona-se também o consumo eléctrico dos seis edifícios com algumas variáveis exógenas, de modo a perceber a influência das mesmas no consumo eléctrico de cada edifício. Numa vertente mais prática, foram identificadas e quantificadas potenciais medidas de melhoria, comportamentais e técnicas, num dos edifícios em estudo, de modo a poder contribuir para a redução do consumo energético do mesmo. Espera-se que este trabalho, possa eventualmente constituir uma ajuda na caracterização de consumos e detecção de medidas de melhoria em edifícios de escritórios, alcançando a eficiência energética neste tipo de instalações e facilitando assim o trabalho de vários profissionais do sector. Pretende-se igualmente demonstrar a importância da eficiência energética na gestão do uso da energia eléctrica em edifícios, e efectuar um paralelo entre a energia economizada por meio da implementação de medidas/acções de uso racional e eficiente, com a redução da queima de combustíveis fosseis na geração de energia eléctrica e a sua consequente redução nas emissões de dióxido de carbono (CO2), com o objectivo final de melhorar a qualidade de vida no nosso planeta.
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A Work Project, presented as part of the requirements for the Award of a Masters Degree in Management from the NOVA – School of Business and Economics
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A Work Project, presented as part of the requirements for the Award of a Masters Degree in Management from the NOVA – School of Business and Economics
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In 2007, the UK government commissioned the Energy Demand Research Project to conduct a large scale experiment of smart metering technologies to test the impacts from many different forms of feedback to residential consumers. A full evaluation of the results was completed in 2011. In Portugal, EDP is also conducting smart meter trials in a project called InovCity in the city of Évora whose results will be evaluated during 2012. In this work, the case of Great Britain is studied as a reference on how an evaluation of trial results should be conducted. I also discuss potential limitations of the experiments, implications for national roll-out decisions, and finally draw some lessons that can be applied to the Portuguese case.
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In this work I propose an additional test to be implemented in EDP’s residential electricity use feedback trials, under InovCity’s project scope. The proposed product to be tested consists of an interface between the smart meter and the television, through a set-top box. I provide a theoretical framework of the importance of feedback, an analysis of results from past studies involving smart metering, and a detailed description of my proposal. The results of a self-developed questionnaire related to the proposal and segmentation issues are also analyzed. Finally, general conclusions are drawn and potential future improvements and challenges are presented.