A smart grid is a transactive grid.
- Lynne Kiesling
P2P Based Local Energy Markets Can Benefit Power Grids and Energy Users

Via Power Ledger, an interesting case study of how a P2P-based local energy market can benefit both power grids and energy users:

The increasing amount of renewable generation creates challenges for the energy providers. Variable renewable energy (VRE), as the name suggests, creates a varying or fluctuating electricity supply. A local energy market (LEM) helps to reduce the impact of fluctuating supply by strategically controlling the VREs and loads. Such a mechanism allows consumers and prosumers (customers who can generate solar PV energy, for instance), that are within a defined geography, to trade energy with one another in a peer-to-peer (P2P) fashion.

LEMs have better financial outcomes for the consumers and prosumers. Therefore, it encourages better VRE technology diffusion while lowering the impact on the grid by reducing the imports and exports from the medium voltage grid.

In this paper, we outline the results of a LEM case study using real customer data in Western Australia — to evaluate the performance of P2P trading in comparison with their business as usual (BAU). The battery energy storage system (BESS) is included in the LEM model to introduce greater flexibility and capture the implications on electricity costs and grid export and import. Compared to BAU, the results of Powerledger’s LEM platform shows that prosumers with BESS receive smaller electricity bills and a maximum reduction in power grid export 28 % and import 33 %.



This entry was posted on Wednesday, September 14th, 2022 at 6:29 am and is filed under Uncategorized.  You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.  Both comments and pings are currently closed. 

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About This Blog And Its Authors
Grid Unlocked is powered by two eco-preneurs who analyze and reference articles, reports, and interviews that can help unlock the nascent, complex and expanding linkages between smart meters, smart grids, and above all: smart markets.

Based on decades of experience and interest in conservation, Monty Simus believes that a truly “smart” grid must be a “transactive” grid, unshackled from its current status as a so-called “natural monopoly.”

In short, an unlocked grid must adopt and harness the power of markets to incentivize individual users, linked to each other on a large scale, who change consumptive behavior in creative ways that drive efficiency and bring equity to use of the planet's finite and increasingly scarce resources.