Innovation and disruption at the grid's edge : how distributed energy resources are disrupting the utility business model /
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Otros Autores: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
London, United Kingdom :
Academic Press is an imprint of Elsevier,
2017.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Cover; Title page; Copyright page; Contents; Author Biographies; Foreword; Preface; Introduction; Part I
- Envisioning Alternative Futures; Chapter 1
- Innovation and Disruption at the Grid's Edge; 1
- Introduction; 2
- Economics of DERs versus traditional bundled service at regulated tariffs; 3
- Bifurcation of customers; 4
- Aggregators, integrators, and intermediaries; 5
- Evolving the role of regulators; 6
- Organization of the book; Chapter 2
- Innovation, Disruption, and the Survival of the Fittest; 1
- Introduction; 2
- Is delivering this transformation really that much of an issue?
- 3
- The five key characteristics of a future energy company3.1
- Characteristic 1: Access to a Portfolio of Generation, Storage, and Flexible Demand Will Remain Important in the Future; 3.2
- Characteristic 2: Risk Management, Optimization, and Trading are Essential Parts in the Operation of a Utility; 3.3
- Characteristic 3: Control of "Big Data" Will Give Leverage for Competitive Advantage; 3.4
- Characteristic 4: User-Friendly Applications and Automation Tools Will Enhance Customer Propositions and Unlock Deman ...
- 3.5
- Characteristic 5: Being Close to the Customers as Their Demands Change4
- The new energy company; 5
- Conclusions; Chapter 3
- The Great Rebalancing: Rattling the Electricity Value Chain from Behind the Meter; 1
- Introduction; 2
- Greater comfort and convenience; 3
- New visions of the value chain: rhetoric, reality, regulation, and the REV; 3.1
- Complicated or Complex?; 4
- The tariff cost stack, the mystery beyond the meter and the full electricity value chain; 4.1
- Customer Assets Beyond the Meter; 5
- The DER dilemma for the true electricity value chain; 6
- Conclusions.
- 7
- Case study: Westchester, New York7.1 Governance and Structure; 7.2 Structure of the Program; 7.3 Energy Procurement; 7.4 Services Beyond Energy Procurement: Community Solar, Demand Response, and Microgrids; 8
- Comparison of community choice aggregation cases; 9
- Conclusions; References; Further Reading; Chapter 5
- Grid Versus Distributed Solar: What Does Australia's Experience Say About the Competitiveness of Distributed En ... ; 1
- Introduction; 2
- Victoria's electricity market; 3
- Analytical methodology; 3.1
- Sensitivity One: Increase Feed-In Tariff by 5 Cents Per kWh.
- 3.2
- Sensitivity Two: Convert Fixed Charges Into Variable Charges and Increase Feed-In Tariffs by 5 Cents Per kWh.