Nice Grid – testing the future
Integrated distributed renewable energy, improved grid reliability…
Fast Company has called Microgrids “the impatient upstarts of our energy future”. It describes them as independent, small-scale electricity systems for communities, towns, campuses and even individuals, delivering integrated distributed renewable energy, improved grid reliability, personal energy usage data and customised control.
Although they are a hot topic, few fully commercialised state-of-the-art microgrids with significant generation capacity are actually up and running. Nice Grid, a living laboratory located near Nice in the south of France, is one of the rare demonstrations of microgrids in the world. The project, which is expected to last four years, brings together ERDF (the French distribution network operator), EDF (the electricity supplier), Alstom, battery maker Saft, and other industrial partners and innovative SMEs. The project has been selected as one of the six smart grid demonstrators of the European Union’s Grid4EU programme. It will test an innovative architecture for medium and low voltage distribution networks with smart houses capable of managing their electricity needs and new architectures called Virtual Power Plants to run them. A total of 1,500 residential, commercial and industrial end users are expected to participate in the experiment.
The objectives of Nice Grid are threefold: to test massive photovoltaic integration; enable islanding for secure supply; and provide demand response for flexible consumption.
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The Nice Grid project is one of 15 smart grid demonstration projects in which Alstom is actively participating around the world. The project will study and test the economic, technical and social issues related to microgrids of the future. These include the optimisation and use of medium and low voltage networks with a massive contribution from decentralised and variable renewable energy sources (principally photovoltaic) as well as the behaviour of customers, who will become agents for their own production, consumption and storage of electricity. Also to be studied is the operation of an independent consumption zone equipped with energy storage resources and isolated from the main network.Nice Grid will interconnect smart homes, smart industrial buildings, energy storage and a large number of solar panels.
Microgrids today…
The balance of energy on the grid will rely on larger volumes of distributed energy resources (renewable energy, demand response and storage). Because today’s distribution network does not accommodate these new types of energy flows, smart local optimisation is needed, while maintaining the quality and security of energy supply.... And tomorrow
Microgrids are the building blocks of tomorrow’s smart cities. They take full advantage of the flexibility of “prosumers” (consumers who also produce electricity) while integrating new distributed energy resources and storage solutions. Fragile areas susceptible to blackouts, as well as densely populated cities, will eventually be made up of autonomous grids within an overall smart grid able to survive major disturbances. Tomorrow’s energy management systems will be designed around a decentralised, multilayer architecture, where microgrids provide the local intelligence and optimisation. New sources of renewable energies such as biomass and microhydro solutions, as well as new storage solutions, will be integrated at the local level. Local microgrids and smart campuses will be part of smart districts, which in turn will be part of smart cities, with each layer optimising the layer below to build up the overall smart grid infrastructure.