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Smart energy strategy

Roxana Isabel Duerr/ssApril 30, 2013

Computer-operated energy networks or “smart grids” are meant to cleverly coordinate energy generation and consumption and reduce fluctuations in supply. But can they really do that? And how feasible is the technology?

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Wind turbines and electricity cables in Germany. Photo: Thomas Klewar
Image: KfW-Bildarchiv / Fotograf: Thomas Klewar

Jhoy Lavenga can hardly imagine a life without power outages. She sells sardines at the Coron market on the Philippine’s Visayan Islands, and she’s learned to keep candles ready to keep her business going.

Candles light up the Coron fish market in the Philippines Photo: Roxana Isabel Duerr
Power outages are a common occurrence at the Coron fish marketImage: Roxana Isabel Duerr

The islands’ electricity grid, operated with the help of three generators, often breaks down: like in many developing countries, blackouts in the Philippines are a near-daily occurrence.

 Decentralization the key

 When it comes to global access to electricity, many believe that official statistics are unreliable because numbers are often inflated to improve a country’s image. Sridhar Samudrala is the Asia director at the World Alliance for Decentralized Energy (WADE), a non-profit organization working to accelerate the global deployment of decentralized energy.  

Samudrala is currently working on a project in Thailand that is to integrate renewable energies into a smart grid. “Worldwide energy security no longer exists because of instable oil prices, so we have to use local resources in a more intelligent way,” he says.

An Internet for energy

But what makes a smart grid so smart? For starters, it’s the digital network’s ability to communicate. It’s like an Internet for energy. It allows any connected energy device to send and receive information through the computer-operated network. The individual components communicate via data transfer facilitated by a modem or ADSL connection.

In concrete terms, if the system registers a cloudy sky in the south of a country, wind parks in the north are given a signal to start producing energy. If the wind isn’t blowing on the coast, hydropower plants or biomass facilities get the green light. If more energy is produced than needed, the surplus can be stored in a special plant and used when needed.  

A smart grid today is usually a hybrid system in that it integrates renewables as well as fossil fuels. A large-scale smart grid that would only use clean power sources, many experts believe, is still too expensive given the current development of the technology.

Italy takes the lead  

But some countries have taken the initiative in embracing the digital energy technology. Italy was one of the first countries in the world to develop a smart grid 12 years ago.

“The smart grid guarantees sustainable and secure energy distribution, with supply and demand in constant balance,” says Marco Cotti, head of Smart Grids and new technologies development at Italian utility Enel. 

A smart meter. Photo: Roxana Isabel Duerr
The smart meter is a key part of smart grid technologyImage: Enel

Today, Enel has provided more than half of Italy’s households with so-called smart meters. The digital meters measure individual energy consumption, and can turn on washing machines, dryers or other household gadgets when the supply of renewable energy is high and prices are low.

In recent years, Portugal, Germany, the Netherlands and the US have all begun building smart grid systems.

Upgrading old grids the first step  

But without fundamentally upgrading existing networks and replacing aging equipment, the smart energy revolution will only remain a dream, experts like Samudrala warn.

And in order for investment in smart energy grids to pay off, governments must get energy producers on board too, he says. That, for instance, would allow utilities to better factor in the energy consumption of household devices.

That, says Samudrala, is the only way to guarantee that smart grids grow more efficient in the future. For consumers, investments in efficient smart grid devices, services and appliances are expected to cost between $500 and 1,500 per household, according to Samudrala. He calls it “a profitable long-term investment.”

Challenges remain

However, smart grid deployment still faces several barriers. In developing countries, the biggest challenge is setting up large-scale energy infrastructure. Booming birth rates and rapid industrialization have spurred massive energy consumption, and many nations are struggling to keep up with demand.  

“For us, smart grids are out of reach right now,” says Indonesian energy entrepreneur Tri Mumpuni. “The costs of the technology, installation and training are simply too high.”  

Indonesian energy entrepreuner Tri Mumpuni. Photo: Roxana Isabel Duerr
Indonesian energy entrepreuner Tri Mumpuni has set up micro hydro projectsImage: IBEKA

She has set up micro hydro power stations for rural regions in Asia. The vast majority of her projects are supported through public funds. Such decentralized energy systems need not just high-performing infrastructure but also highly skilled system engineers.

That is why Sridhar Samudrala believes governments in developing countries should aim to make loans from multinational institutions earmarked for such projects more transparent and also use the funds more efficiently.

The consumer is king

But with transparency introduced into the process and a close monitoring of private energy consumption an integral part of smart grid technology, where does that leave the consumer?

Sridhala believes they will play a key role in the smart energy process.“At the end of the day, customers will become the driving force behind the energy transition. The consumer will be transformed from a passive subscriber to an engaged user on the energy market.”

For Philippine fish vendor Jhoy Lavenga, that will take time. She knows she will have to burn several more candles until that day comes.