Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

RETHINKING THE ELECTRICITY GRID RETHINKING THE ELECTRICITY GRID 14 May 2012 Presented by: PATRICIA DE SUZZONI ADVISOR TO THE CHAIR OF CRE (French Energy.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "RETHINKING THE ELECTRICITY GRID RETHINKING THE ELECTRICITY GRID 14 May 2012 Presented by: PATRICIA DE SUZZONI ADVISOR TO THE CHAIR OF CRE (French Energy."— Presentation transcript:

1 RETHINKING THE ELECTRICITY GRID RETHINKING THE ELECTRICITY GRID 14 May 2012 Presented by: PATRICIA DE SUZZONI ADVISOR TO THE CHAIR OF CRE (French Energy Regulator) STRIKING A BALANCE IN THE MIDST OF CHANGE May 13-16, 2012 Québec City, Québec (Canada)

2 TODAY’S AGENDA ON SMART GRIDS  ICER report on the regulatory approaches to the implementation of smart meters  The French case: from smart meters to smart grids  Objectives and regulation in the European Union 

3 TODAY’S AGENDA ON SMART GRIDS  The French case: from smart meters to smart grids  Objectives and regulation in the European Union  ICER report on the regulatory approaches to the implementation of smart meters

4 ICER REPORT ON SMART METERING  ICER: a voluntary framework for cooperation  Implementation of smart meters so far has been a complex task, advice needed  A portfolio of case studies based on jurisdictions with direct experience

5 6 MATURE MARKETS STUDIED  Electricity and gas (large-size markets):  France (35M electricity, 11M gas customers)  Italy  UK  Electricity (medium-size markets):  Canada-Ontario (4,8M customers)  Sweden (5,2M)  USA- Colorado (3M)

6 MAIN FINDING 1: LEADERSHIP IS NEEDED  A clear decision on which organisation is leading on smart metering policy is needed at an early stage  Government, NRA, commercial body  If commercial body, sound legal and regulatory framework is needed 

7 MAIN FINDING 2: MARKET DESIGN MUST BE CLEAR  Clear roles & responsibilities for market participants  Ownership of meters  Minimum functionalities of systems  Standards to ensure interoperability  How and when costs of implementation can be recovered  …

8 MAIN FINDING 3: SMART METERING PROJECTS SHOULD BE WELL PREPARED  Usefulness of pilot exercises before full implementation  Implementation may take years to be completed  An impact assessment to develop sound policy proposals  The proposed smart meter model should accommodate future developments in technology and market

9 MAIN FINDING 4: CUSTOMERS HAVE TO BE EMPOWERED  Engagement of consumers in the policy-making process  Specific customer protection measures, e.g. data privacy & cyber security  Customers’ need of simplicity with more complex tariff structure

10 TODAY’S AGENDA ON SMART GRIDS  ICER report on the regulatory approaches to the implementation of smart meters  The French case : from smart meters to smart grids  Objectives and regulation in the European Union

11 THE FRENCH CASE: A PROACTIVE REGULATOR  CRE created as an independent Authority in 2000  Engaged in smart grids since the beginning  A 2-step approach: Smart meteringSmart grid

12 SMART METERING AS A FIRST STEP TO SMART DISTRIBUTION GRIDS  Dialogue with stakeholders Consumer bodies, retailers, DSOs, TSO, Administration, equipment manufacturers, system integrators  Control of Linky Pilot and cost-benefit analysis  300 000 smart meters 2010/2011  Regulation of roll out  July 2011: roll out mandatory for 35 million customers  January 2012: minimum functionalities

13 THE THINK TANK APPROACH  In 2010, CRE organised a conference and as a follow up released « The electricity of the future: a worldwide challenge »  Permanent forum / quarterly workshops www.smartgrids-cre.fr

14 HOW TO REGULATE SMART GRIDS Three key objectives of Smart Grid regulation: Ensure a fair distribution of added value Develop / incentivise investment of general interest Have a leading / coordination role

15 TODAY’S AGENDA ON SMART GRIDS ICER report on the regulatory approaches to the implementation of smart meters The French case: from smart meters to smart grids Objectives and regulation in the European Union 

16 A TOOL TO MEET AMBITIOUS OBJECTIVES  EU energy policy’s 4 key objectives:  Smart grids are a mandatory tool to meet these objectives Well-functioning markets Security of Supply Energy efficiency and renewables Interconnection

17 HOW TO FINANCE  Major investment but estimates vary 450€/customer would lead to 115 B€ investment for EU distribution grids between 2013 and 2023  Business models / scope of regulation / grid tariffs

18 SMART GRIDS: FROM INNOVATION TO DEPLOYMENT  2011 EC communication  No regulation of smart grid infrastructure so far  2009: 80% target by 2020 for electricity smart meters 2012 EC recommendations to Member States on minimum functionalities and cost-benefit analyses  Standardisation in progress  Role of interconnection and market mechanisms

19 Thank you for your attention www.smartgrids-cre.fr The ICER Report on Smart Metering is available at www.icer-regulators.net

20 ANNEXES

21 THE EU 2020 AGENDA THE LEGAL FRAMEWORK  The Climate-Energy Package (2008) Increasing renewable energy supply to 20% of total demand Reducing consumption by 20% with respect to 1990 levels Reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 20% with respect to 1990 levels  The 3rd Energy Package (2009) 80% equipped with smart meters for electricity, cost-benefit analysis conducted by Member States by Sept 2012  The Energy Efficiency Directive revision under discussion (2012)

22 OVERVIEW OF SMART GRID INVESTMENT AND IMPLEMENTATION ACROSS THE EU Projects/category Total 277 implementation sites Investments/category Total3848.7 M€ Project investments (M€) 75 Investments (M€) / No. of project implementation sites per country Other Storage Transmission automation Home application Distribution automation Integrated systems Smart meters Source: JRC, IE Projects represented can span over more than one country and can include more than one category. Three projects are not represented in this picture: Kriegers Flak project, a supergrid between Germany and Denmark total investment of 507 M€; smart meter roll-out and AMI in UK, estimated investment of 11897M€; and smart meter roll-out in Sweden, spanning approximately 150 projects and amounting to a total investment of approximately 1500 M€.

23 APRIL 2011 EC COMMUNICATION SMART GRIDS FROM INNOVATION TO DEPLOYMENT  Developing common European standards  Adressing data privacy and security issues  Allowing regulatory incentives for deployment  Ensuring competitive services to customers  Supporting innovation and rapid application

24 CEER POSITION PAPER ON SMART GRIDS  Public consultation led to a consensus on 3 main priorities for regulation: To focus on the outputs of network companies To encourage cooperation among stakeholders to address the barrriers To encourage innovation while protecting customers


Download ppt "RETHINKING THE ELECTRICITY GRID RETHINKING THE ELECTRICITY GRID 14 May 2012 Presented by: PATRICIA DE SUZZONI ADVISOR TO THE CHAIR OF CRE (French Energy."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google