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A Case Study of Socially-Accepted Potentials for the Use of End User Flexibility by Home Energy Management Systems

Author

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  • Christian Pfeiffer

    (Forschung Burgenland GmbH, Campus 1, 7000 Eisenstadt, Austria)

  • Markus Puchegger

    (Forschung Burgenland GmbH, Campus 1, 7000 Eisenstadt, Austria)

  • Claudia Maier

    (Forschung Burgenland GmbH, Campus 1, 7000 Eisenstadt, Austria)

  • Ina V. Tomaschitz

    (Forschung Burgenland GmbH, Campus 1, 7000 Eisenstadt, Austria)

  • Thomas P. Kremsner

    (Forschung Burgenland GmbH, Campus 1, 7000 Eisenstadt, Austria)

  • Lukas Gnam

    (Forschung Burgenland GmbH, Campus 1, 7000 Eisenstadt, Austria)

Abstract

Due to the increase of volatile renewable energy resources, additional flexibility will be necessary in the electricity system in the future to ensure a technically and economically efficient network operation. Although home energy management systems hold potential for a supply of flexibility to the grid, private end users often neglect or even ignore recommendations regarding beneficial behavior. In this work, the social acceptance and requirements of a participatively developed home energy management system with focus on (i) system support optimization, (ii) self-consumption and self-sufficiency optimization, and (iii) additional comfort functions are determined. Subsequently, the socially-accepted flexibility potential of the home energy management system is estimated. Using methods of online household survey, cluster analysis, and energy-economic optimization, the socially-accepted techno-economic potential of households in a three-community cluster sample area is computed. Results show about a third of the participants accept the developed system. This yields a shiftable load of nearly 1.8 MW within the small sample area. Furthermore, the system yields the considerably larger monetary surplus on the supplier-side due to its focus on system support optimization. New electricity market opportunities are necessary to adequately reward a systemically useful load behavior of households.

Suggested Citation

  • Christian Pfeiffer & Markus Puchegger & Claudia Maier & Ina V. Tomaschitz & Thomas P. Kremsner & Lukas Gnam, 2020. "A Case Study of Socially-Accepted Potentials for the Use of End User Flexibility by Home Energy Management Systems," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 13(1), pages 1-19, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:13:y:2020:i:1:p:132-:d:468168
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    References listed on IDEAS

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