Metering Service Provider

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© CINTERION Wireless Modules GmbH 2011, All rights reserved Who takes the role and what's in it ? Metering Service Provider

Transcript of Metering Service Provider

© CINTERION Wireless Modules GmbH 2011, All rights reserved

Who takes the role and what's in it ?

Metering Service Provider

Smart Grid – an open concept and not a wondourus mon ey maker…

CINTERIONPage 2ETSI Workshop – Smart Grid

5./6. April 2011

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….but also a standardization challenge between big in dustries*

CINTERIONPage 3ETSI Workshop – Smart Grid

5./6. April 2011

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Source: KEMA, M.Burke

…from the industry perspective to the Consumer Chall enge*

CINTERIONPage 4ETSI Workshop – Smart Grid

5./6. April 2011

* source: www.smartgridnews.com

…and our attitude…

CINTERIONPage 5ETSI Workshop – Smart Grid

5./6. April 2011

STANDARDIZED

Contractual marketsInnovation markets

Customer relationsPerception of „Utilities“ during Lifetime

„Recipient“

-1985“reliable availability”

„wants“RELEVANCY/TRUST

„Fan“

-1900“access to electricity”

CINTERIONPage 6ETSI Workshop – Smart Grid

5./6. April 2011

Commodity markets No Market

„ no choice“

„dont want“NO TRUST/LOW INVOLVEMENT

„Locked-in“

„dependend, without choice“~1990

„Optimizer“

„Price per unit – on the spot“~2008

„choice“

Contractual marketsInnovation markets

Information, Service, EngagementHow to make them TRUST again

„Actor“

-2020“Prosumer ???”

„wants“TRUST

„Participant“

-2011“information+ service”

CINTERIONPage 7ETSI Workshop – Smart Grid

5./6. April 2011

„dont want“NO TRUST

„ no choice“

„Locked-in“

„dependend, without choice“~1990

„Optimizer“

„Commodity“~2008

„need not“

Who is guding the consuming people, buildings and devices into this future ?

CINTERIONPage 8ETSI Workshop – Smart Grid

5./6. April 2011

CONCEPT OF METER OPERATOR / METERING SERVICE PROVIDER X

Market driver and deployment wavesRegulation stipulates, Customers demand, Technologi e enables

Smart GridEffiicient infrastructure

Transperancy AccessParticipation

CINTERIONPage 9ETSI Workshop – Smart Grid

5./6. April 2011

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Timeline (country/region specific)

AMIData-generation

Demand ResponseEfficient markets

1. Other market roles2. New business models3. Additional Standards

15%+ CO2 Reduction

Necessary outcome 2020+: restructuring/resetting Bu siness modelsNew Energy Management on a re-newed smart grid

Service Contract

Retail

(VUO)

Market

DE

MA

ND

SID

E M

AN

AG

EM

EN

T

Generation

(market-

place)

CINTERIONPage 10ETSI Workshop – Smart Grid

5./6. April 2011

§Meter

(Gateway)

Communication Infrastructure

DNO

Electricity

Market C

omunication

DE

MA

ND

SID

E M

AN

AG

EM

EN

T

Price signal

AU

TO

MA

TIO

N

CO

NT

RO

L

Thesis: 1. Diffentiating Value is created by new market role

2. Complexity reduction in customers energy management will be the business – Savings and Shift of usage makes the money

3. Customers are: all kinds of Consumers, Grid operato rs and the

CINTERIONPage 11ETSI Workshop – Smart Grid

5./6. April 2011

3. Customers are: all kinds of Consumers, Grid operato rs and the generation side ���� the whole market place

4. As Interlink between generation and demand, MO must rely on both – standards in physical energy networks as well as in underlying communication infrastructure

Question is not IF but HOW do we enable the business architecture?

Starting Point: 100+ years historyblind consumption, reliable system, monpoly structu res

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Contract

Retail

(VUO)

Meter

Market

„Blind“

2010-2015

▪ AMI-Rollouts

▪ Time of Use Tariffs

▪ Meter2cash automation

▪ Loss/Fraud avoidance

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CINTERIONPage 12ETSI Workshop – Smart Grid

5./6. April 2011

§Data Collection

Meter(Gateway)

DNO

Electricity

Market C

omunication

„Blind“ C

onsumption

▪ Sustainable savings

▪ Integration renewables

▪ Customer Engagement

2014 - 2020

▪ DemandResponse

▪ E-Mobility

▪ Electrification 2.0

▪ Smart Home

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Meter operator model 1: mandated full roll outremote and digitalized meter reads for measuring co nsumption

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Contract + Data

Retail

(VUO)

Meter

Market

Transparency

2010-2015

▪ AMI-Rollouts

▪ Time of Use Tariffs

▪ Meter2cash automation

▪ Loss/Fraud avoidance

☺☺☺☺

����

☺☺☺☺

☺☺☺☺

CINTERIONPage 13ETSI Workshop – Smart Grid

5./6. April 2011

§Data Collection

Meter(Gateway)

DNO

Electricity

Market C

omunication

TransparencyC

onsumption

▪ Sustainable savings

▪ Integration renewables

▪ Customer Engagement

2014 - 2020

▪ DemandResponse

▪ E-Mobility

▪ Electrification 2.0

▪ Smart Home

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2010-2015

▪ AMI-Rollouts

▪ Time of Use Tariffs

▪ Meter2cash automation

▪ Loss/Fraud avoidanceMeter

Meter Operator model 2: fragmented demand drivenCustomer closes meter operations/meter service cont ract and pays

§

Contract+Tools

Retail

(VUO)

Market

����

☺☺☺☺

☺☺☺☺

☺☺☺☺

CINTERIONPage 14ETSI Workshop – Smart Grid

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▪ Sustainable savings

▪ Integration renewables

▪ Customer Engagement

2014 - 2020

▪ DemandResponse

▪ E-Mobility

▪ Electrification 2.0

▪ Smart Home

Meter(Gateway)

Contract+Tools §DNO

Electricity

Market C

omunication

Control

☺☺☺☺

☺☺☺☺

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Meter operator model 3: mandated full roll out and unbundlingremote and digitalized meter reads for measuring co nsumption

§

Contract

Retail

(VUO)

Market Meter

Transparency

2010-2015

▪ AMI-Rollouts

▪ Time of Use Tariffs

▪ Meter2cash automation

▪ Loss/Fraud avoidance

Meter

☺☺☺☺

☺☺☺☺

☺☺☺☺

☺☺☺☺

CINTERIONPage 15ETSI Workshop – Smart Grid

5./6. April 2011

§DNO

Electricity

Market C

omunication

Data Collection

Meter(Gateway)

TransparencyC

onsumption

▪ Sustainable savings

▪ Integration renewables

▪ Customer Engagement

2014 - 2020

▪ DemandResponse

▪ E-Mobility

▪ Electrification 2.0

▪ Smart Home

Data Collection

Meter(Gateway)

Control???

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Main characteristics of Meter Operator models

Meter operator1 Dedicated MultipleDeditcated �

Unbundled

AMI Roll-out2 Mandated / Full /Fast Fragmented/Slow Mandated / Area/Fast

Functional requirements3 Limited Demand driven t.b.d.

Model 1 Model 2 Model 3

CINTERIONPage 16ETSI Workshop – Smart Grid

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Functional requirements3 Limited Demand driven t.b.d.

Role of Meter/MUC4 Data collection Service Gateway t.b.d.

Business Case5 Fee +Theft reduction

+Service deployment unclear

Regulation focus6 Enablement/TCO

Purpose7 Single Multi Predefined

Cost of Infra Cost + Enablement

Model 1 Model 2 Model 3

B Fraud prevention

Standardization needs:

Infrastructure protectionC

PrivacyA Highest standards to be designed-in

Highest standards in communication

Highest standards in hardware devices

CINTERIONPage 17ETSI Workshop – Smart Grid

5./6. April 2011

Infrastructure protectionC Highest standards in hardware devices

SECURITY STANDARDS

FORMETER OPERATORS…

….ARE THE STARTING POINT FOR INTERCHANGABILITY AND

INTEROPERABILITY

Smart Grid – an open concept and not a wondourus mon ey maker…

SECURITY

NATIONAL

ECONOMIC

INVESTMENT

CASH FLOW

PSYCHOLOGICAL

TRANSACTION

CINTERIONPage 18ETSI Workshop – Smart Grid

5./6. April 2011

SECURITY

SUPPLY

TRANSMISSION

GENERATION

PHYSICAL

PSYCHOLOGICAL

PERSONAL

SOCIETAL

© CINTERION Wireless Modules GmbH 2011, All rights reserved

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