Unlocking the power of smart grids and decentralising energy production | Infrastructure news

By Martin Vergunst, business solutions executive at T-Systems South Africa

South Africa remains heavily reliant on traditional sources of power generation – with green energy sources contributing just a fraction of the country’s total power output. However, with immense solar and wind resource availability, South Africa is ideal for the adoption of renewable energy.

From a power perspective, the past decade has been characterised by a utility that has struggled to keep up with rapidly escalating consumer demand, as millions of new households have started consuming power from the national grid. Developing new coal-fired or nuclear sources – which also causes irreparable damage to our environment – is simply not keeping pace with demand.

Internet of energy

However, for green energy in South Africa to move from pipe-dream to reality, the most fundamental starting point is the introduction of smart grid and smart metering platforms. Smart grids have the capabilities to accurately measure and bill, and to connect household solar or wind generation that can feed power back to the grid. ICT services multinational T-Systems advocate the concept of “The Internet of Energy”: a vision where the national grid becomes a central hub, where millions of households produce small amounts of green energy and trade it efficiently and instantaneously using smart grid technology.

As power supply becomes decentralised, regions become micro-grids, exchanging electricity where it is needed. In fact, it’s possible to use the analogy of the Internet itself. In the early days of the Internet, all individuals were simply passive consumers of online content and services. But over the past decade or so, people have started producing increasing levels of content ourselves (“the social media revolution”). Now, web users have the opportunity to stimulate the same trend in the Internet of Energy, and transform every household or office into a “personal power plant” that generates its own green electricity. Imagine opening up an app on your cellphone, and transmitting stored energy to other users, just as easily as we share digital content by uploading it to the Internet.

South African consumers are increasingly ready to seriously adopt renewable energy – for a number of reasons:

  • Environmental consciousness and concerns;
  • Avoiding massive annual price hikes;
  • The opportunity to start making money by selling power back to the utility;
  • Avoiding load-shedding, and
  • For use in extremely remote areas where electricity is not available.
Making it happen

So, what needs to happen for this to become a reality? Currently, citizens find themselves in a state where there are insufficient incentives to move to clean energy. Implementing solar technology within the household costs in the tens or the hundreds of thousands of rand – which is out of reach for most consumers.

So firstly, the costs of solar panels, batteries and the related equipment needs to drop, and the technology needs to continue improving (to better consume and store the power). Added to this, more incentive programmes need to be introduced, to help stimulate the trend towards clean energy.

The possible introduction of a carbon emissions tax at a household level may further inspire the migration to renewables. When all of these dynamics converge, we will reach a tipping point: as more households embrace renewables, the economies of scale will start driving down prices even more rapidly.

 

The Internet of Energy promises to redefine the way energy is produced, stored, distributed and consumed. It requires a coming-together of the energy and the IT sectors, to bring to life the exciting vision – where consumers start becoming producers and sellers of green energy.

 

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