Demand Side Management

Huge quantities of electrical energy in the USA can be saved for less than the cost of generating and transmitting the same amount of electricity.

"Consumers don't want to buy electricity or fuel.
They want warm showers and cold beer".

Amory and L. Hunter Lovins, Rocky Mountain Institute


Berkeley Lab to Operate Demand Response Research Center

Originally published in the Energy User News, August 2004, Volume 29, No. 8

    To enlarge the picture, click on it.
Example of the hourly price of electricity on critical summer weekdays (generic)

The California Energy Commission is providing $8 million in funding over three years for a new Demand Response Research Center (DRRC) that will be managed by the U.S. Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab). It is sponsored by the Commission's Public Interest Energy Research (PIER) program. The director of the new center is Mary Ann Piette, a scientist in Berkeley Lab's Environmental Energy Technologies Division. Being able to respond to electricity price signals in real time should enable power-users to save money, reduce energy consumption, and lower energy prices by making the power market more responsive to consumer needs. However, the technology to implement demand-response programs in California and the rest of the U.S. is only beginning to be available, and much remains to be learned about the program's cost-effectiveness.

"With the opening of this research center," Piette says, "the California Energy Commission has taken another concrete step to making demand-response programs a reality in California. The Commission recognizes that demand response offers the state a powerful, rapid, market-based response to growing electrical demand." The Demand Response Research Center will initiate planning through a scoping study to be completed this fall.

Demand response has been identified as an important element of the State of California's Energy Action Plan, which was developed by the California Energy Commission (CEC), the California Public Utilities Commission, and the Consumer Power and Conservation Financing Authority.

The DRRC will fund research in four areas:

Source:  http://www.energyusernews.com/CDA/ArticleInformation/coverstory/BNPCoverStoryItem/0,2582,129829.html


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