May 2009 |
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Berkeley Lab Researchers Announce OpenADR Specification to Ease Saving Power in Buildings Through Demand Response
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New specification will advance development of "Smart
Grid"
Berkeley, CA—A new data model developed by researchers at the Department of
Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and their colleagues at other
universities and in the private sector will help facilities and buildings save
power through automated demand response technology, and advance the development
of the Smart Grid.
The researchers who developed Open ADR (Open Automated Demand Response) are part
of the Demand Response Research Center (DRRC), a center funded by the California
Energy Commission’s Public Interest Energy Research Program. The DRRC’s goal is
to develop technologies to make it possible for buildings and facilities to
adopt demand response as a way of saving peak power use, and reducing stress on
the electric grid during times of high energy demand.
“The purpose of this specification is to help building and facilities managers
implement automated demand response in their facilities, as well as assist
electric utilities to help their commercial and industrial customers participate
in power pricing programs that incorporate automated demand response,” said Mary
Ann Piette, the Deputy Head of the Building Technologies Department, and
Research Director of the Demand Response Research Center.
“OpenADR also helps manufacturers of building automation equipment design
products for Smart Grid implementation, and power aggregators incorporate demand
response into their work. OpenADR builds on six years of research in California
to develop autoDR technology and demonstrate it in buildings with our utility
and commercial partners.”
With widespread interest nationally in turning the electric grid into a “Smart
Grid,” the new OpenADR specification will help more facilities adopt, and
building automation companies develop products for Auto DR, by providing a
common, open specification that all parties can use as a reference.
What is DR, and AutoDR?
Demand response, DR, is a central part of the so-called “Smart Grid.” DR is
the process of managing energy use dynamically through cooperation between power
customers, their electric utility, and the electric system’s operator (the
independent system operator, or ISO). When the electrical grid is near capacity
for any reason—for example, when too many air conditioners start laboring on a
hot summer’s day—the ISO informs electric utilities and power consumers that
there’s a problem in the offing.
Tests of automated demand response in commercial buildings throughout California
show significant reductions in peak electricity load. The white area under the
baseline curve represents the amount of power not used because of automated
demand response. These tests are being conducted as part of a multi-year testing
program funded by the California Energy Commission Public Interest Energy
Research program. This graph includes data from 28 sites around California.
While shutting building systems down by hand can help reduce the overall
electric demand, manual interventions are not always reliable, consistent, or
persistent. AutoDR provides an automated alternative to manual response.
AutoDR is the technology and communications platform developed by the Demand
Response Research Center, which was launched by the California Energy
Commission’s Public Interest Energy Research (PIER) program at Berkeley Lab in
2003, to support all forms of demand response. Under Piette’s direction, the
DRRC manages a portfolio of research projects that address pricing, valuation,
behavior, building dynamics, and technology development.
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Features of OpenADR
“The OpenADR Specification uses open, non-proprietary, industry-approved
data models—any interested party can develop products around it. Its
communications interfaces and protocols are flexible, platform-independent,
interoperable, and transparent to end-to-end technologies and software systems,”
says Piette.
An open specification helps encourage innovation and interoperability. It allows
system designers to build on existing controls and communications strategies
used within their facilities to reduce technology operation and maintenance
costs, stranded assets, and obsolesce in technology.
System designers can integrate their facility’s energy management and control
systems (EMCS), centralized lighting, and other end-use devices that can receive
a relay or Internet signals using, for example, eXtensible Markup Language
(XML).
The specification includes provisions for including opt-out or override
functions through a Web portal. Research on facility managers preferences
suggest that providing manual control over automatic, pre-programmed changes in
building energy use is an essential feature for facility managers interested in
joining utility demand response programs.
The OpenADR specification was developed by: Mary Ann Piette, Girish Ghatikar,
and Sila Kiliccote of the Demand Response Research Center at the Lawrence
Berkeley National Laboratory, Ed Koch and Dan Hennage, Akuacom, Peter Palensky,
University of Pretoria, David Holmberg, National Institute of Standards and
Technology, Dave Robin, Automated Logic Controls, Jim Butler, Cimetrics, and
Charles McParland, Computational Research Division, Lawrence Berkeley National
Laboratory.
Berkeley Lab is a U.S. Department of Energy national laboratory located in
Berkeley, California. It conducts unclassified scientific research and is
managed for the DOE Office of Science by the University of California. Visit our
Website at www.lbl.gov
Additional information:
Download Open Automated Demand Response Communications Specification (Version
1.0) at:
http://drrc.lbl.gov/openadr/pdf/CEC-500-2009-063.pdf
Find out more about the Demand Response Research Center:
http://drrc.lbl.gov
Another article about automated demand response:
http://www.lbl.gov/Science-Articles/Archive/sabl/2008/Feb/ADR.html
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