In France we had the controversial deployment of the smart electric meter Linky, sending regular consumption and telemetry data via CPL through the grid to Enedis and downloading updates. Now I'm wondering why wouldn't there be a local "broadcast" of the state of the local grid to the Linky and then it could send data again with cpl in a known standard to appliances so they can start when the grid is low usage no internet required ?
For sure, that sounds very doable, though there are still some hurdles, like why would a consumer partake in that scheme? There has to be some reward for offering flexible consumption of energy for grid stability. There also needs to be a controller/arbiter that does the scheduling.
Economic incentives, we already have a system of low/high hours with different prices to motivate people to run their big appliances at times of low usage. There's usually a window during the day and another in the middle of the night. But why implement this whole system when OEMs already connect their devices to your wifi and can force you to use an app to setup custom running times...
Well, why would a consumer submit themselves to such a system when they can run their appliances directly?
Additionally, that pricing mechanism doesn't work for reasons outlined in the article, it will actually concentrate energy consumption when consumers delegate activation of devices to a controller that automatically starts it at the moment of lowest cost.
Furthermore, when devices like electric vehicles become even more prevalent, we need some kind of balancing mechanism because of grid capacity, and traditional pricing is not it.
Check out the latest post on my blog, where I write about a variety of topics - as long it combines math and code in some way. This post takes a short look at the challenges of controllable devices in a smart grid. https://bitsandtheorems.com/managing-time-shiftable-devices/
In France we had the controversial deployment of the smart electric meter Linky, sending regular consumption and telemetry data via CPL through the grid to Enedis and downloading updates. Now I'm wondering why wouldn't there be a local "broadcast" of the state of the local grid to the Linky and then it could send data again with cpl in a known standard to appliances so they can start when the grid is low usage no internet required ?
For sure, that sounds very doable, though there are still some hurdles, like why would a consumer partake in that scheme? There has to be some reward for offering flexible consumption of energy for grid stability. There also needs to be a controller/arbiter that does the scheduling.
Economic incentives, we already have a system of low/high hours with different prices to motivate people to run their big appliances at times of low usage. There's usually a window during the day and another in the middle of the night. But why implement this whole system when OEMs already connect their devices to your wifi and can force you to use an app to setup custom running times...
Well, why would a consumer submit themselves to such a system when they can run their appliances directly?
Additionally, that pricing mechanism doesn't work for reasons outlined in the article, it will actually concentrate energy consumption when consumers delegate activation of devices to a controller that automatically starts it at the moment of lowest cost.
Furthermore, when devices like electric vehicles become even more prevalent, we need some kind of balancing mechanism because of grid capacity, and traditional pricing is not it.
Check out the latest post on my blog, where I write about a variety of topics - as long it combines math and code in some way. This post takes a short look at the challenges of controllable devices in a smart grid. https://bitsandtheorems.com/managing-time-shiftable-devices/
No spam please
How is this spam exactly?
"Check out the latest post on my blog" - you're promoting your own blog.
smells like spam to me
So no one is allowed to share their own content according to you?
If anything, your comments are spam in that they aren't on topic.