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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Fereidoon Sioshansi (President, Menlo Energy Economics, San Francisco, CA, USA)Publisher: Elsevier Science Publishing Co Inc Imprint: Academic Press Inc Weight: 0.950kg ISBN: 9780128199510ISBN 10: 0128199512 Pages: 460 Publication Date: 04 February 2020 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsPart One: Visionaries, dreamers, innovators 1. What lies behind-the-meter and why it matters? 2. It’s not science fiction: Going zero net energy and loving it 3. Creating value: Digitalization, aggregation and optimization of behind-the-meter assets 4. Customer participation in P2P trading: A German energy community case study 5. Aggregators today and tomorrow: From intermediaries to orchestrators? 6. Energy communities: A Dutch case study 7. The expanding role of home energy management ecosystems: An Australian perspective Part Two: Implementers and disrupters 8. Behind and beyond the meter: What’s in it for the system? 9. Working backwards to get behind the meter: What customer value, behavior, opportunity and uncertainty mean for new technologies 10. Aggregation of front- and behind-the-meter: The evolving VPP business model 11. Platform for trading flexibility on the distribution network: A UK case study 12. Smart meters: The gateway to behind-the-meter? 13. D3A Energy Exchange for a Transactive Grid 14. Emerging aggregator business models in European electricity markets Part Three: Regulators, policymakers and investors 15. BTM prospects: Do prices matter? 16. Regulating off-the-grid: Stand-alone power systems in Australia 17. Distribution network tariff design for behind-the-meter: Balancing efficiency and fairness 18. What market design, fiscal policy and network regulations are compatible with efficient BTM investments? 19. Two million plus solar roofs: What’s in it for the consumers? 20. Will behind-the-meter make a difference?ReviewsOur electricity grid was not built to accommodate large amounts of power being generated back into it from multiple small sources - reverse electricity flows. Getting the integration of the behind-the-meter technologies right could deliver more than $1 billion in benefits to customers by 2030 in Australia alone. --Andrew Dillon , CEO, Energy Networks Australia As options to generate, store and potentially trade energy, proliferate and intermediaries emerge to aggregate and optimize the behind-the-meter loads and resources, the principle function of the distribution network and the interface among the stakeholders will be radically altered. --Paul de Wit, Sr. Adviser at Alliander, the Netherlands and Chair of Eurelectric's Working Group on Institutional Frameworks The evolving nature of electric generation, consumption, storage and the distribution system has significant implications for the grid, incumbent utilities, consumers, grid managers and the regulatory framework. These are among the central matters the Alberta Utilities Commission will examine in its ongoing distribution inquiry. --Mark Kolesar, Chair, Alberta Utilities Commission Our electricity grid was not built to accommodate large amounts of power being generated back into it from multiple small sources - reverse electricity flows. Getting the integration of the behind-the-meter technologies right could deliver more than $1 billion in benefits to customers by 2030 in Australia alone. --Andrew Dillon, CEO, Energy Networks Australia As options to generate, store and potentially trade energy, proliferate and intermediaries emerge to aggregate and optimize the behind-the-meter loads and resources, the principle function of the distribution network and the interface among the stakeholders will be radically altered. --Paul de Wit, Sr. Adviser at Alliander, the Netherlands and Chair of Eurelectric's Working Group on Institutional Frameworks The evolving nature of electric generation, consumption, storage and the distribution system has significant implications for the grid, incumbent utilities, consumers, grid managers and the regulatory framework. These are among the central matters the Alberta Utilities Commission will examine in its ongoing distribution inquiry. --Mark Kolesar, Chair, Alberta Utilities Commission Author InformationDr. Fereidoon Sioshansi is President of Menlo Energy Economics, a consulting firm based in San Francisco with over 35 years of experience in the electric power sector working in analysis of energy markets, specializing in the policy, regulatory, technical and environmental aspects of the electric power sector in the US and internationally. His research and professional interests are concentrated in demand and price forecasting, electricity market design, competitive pricing & bidding, integrated resource planning, energy conservation and energy efficiency, economics of global climate change, sustainability, energy security, renewable energy technologies, and comparative performance of competitive electricity markets. Dr. Sioshansi advises major utility clients and government policy makers domestically and internationally on electricity market reform, restructuring and privatization of the electric power sector. He has published numerous reports, books, book chapters and papers in peer-reviewed journals on a wide range of subjects. His professional background includes working at Southern California Edison Co. (SCE), Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI), NERA, and Global Energy Decisions. He is the editor and publisher of EEnergy Informer, a monthly newsletter with international circulation. He is on the Editorial Advisory Board of The Electricity Journal where he is regularly featured in the “Electricity Currents section. Dr. Sioshansi also serves on the editorial board of Utilities Policy and is a frequent contributor to Energy Policy. Since 2006, He has edited 12 books on related topics with Elsevier. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |