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EnerNoc

California Energy Summit Speaks to Challenges in Demand Response

California Energy Summit Speaks to Challenges in Demand Response

written by 2GreenEnergy

I had the pleasure of attending Infocast’s annual California Energy Summit this week, and I wish to enter a few posts for readers who may be interested in the subject.  Here’s the first of several:

As always, there were a few presenters who made remarks so asinine that some people rolled their eyes, wondering how it was possible that they had heard something so ridiculous.  When the speaker delivering this morning’s keynote talked about how hard she had worked to get high speed electric vehicle charging stations into low-income neighborhoods, the guy sitting next to me immediately leaned over to me and said, “Oh, isn’t that impressive, Craig? We can only guess how many ($80K) Teslas the people of (impoverished) East Oakland have.”  I try not to be quite as brutal, but the guy had a point: surely, there are a great many more practical energy-related goals.

Most of the content, however, was really excellent, albeit sobering.  I caught a terrific presentation on demand response (DR) later this morning, in which one of the panelists who had come from EnerNOC, and now works for one of the other large third-party DR aggregators, told the audience a few things that really sunk in:

• Load (which peaks in the afternoon and early evening) is becoming even “peakier.”

• His company has a portfolio of about 10,000 MW of DR, of which only 300 MW is from the entire state of California.  They have twice that in the city of Chicago alone.

• So how do we unlock this puzzle in California, by far the largest energy market in the country, and create participation in this all-important phenomenon?   Simplicity.  Ratepayers in PJM (the mid-Atlantic) save $12 billion each year with DR.  That’s $200 per person per year, which they find really compelling. This comes to pass because they have a set of DR regulations that Forrest Gump could understand; everyone knows exactly how to plan so they can participate in the program with minimum risk.  By contrast, in California, we’ve had (in the speaker’s words) “three dozen different plans in the 10 years I’ve been working to sell DR in this state.”  No one has a clue how it works today, much less how it will work next year.

You expect people to buy something they can’t understand — or whose future they can’t predict?  That makes working your guts out to put high-end EV charging stations is East Oakland look smart by comparison.



May 30, 2014 0 comment
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Energy Efficiency: Big Deals and New Ideas

written by Walter Wang

The economic premise behind energy efficiency – that it’s cheaper to save a unit of energy than to make one – has caught on in the US. Energy efficiency spending is up, and our energy use is declining, measured both per capita and per dollar of gross domestic product, according to government figures.

So it is not surprising to see the year begin with

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January 10, 2013 0 comment
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Will Cyber-Sensitivities Reveal the Future of Energy Efficiency

written by Walter Wang

The US economy is three times larger than China’s, yet when it comes to developing a clean energy industry, China keeps besting us. The US came in second – again – to China this quarter in Ernst & Young’s much-watched renewable energy ranking released February 28.

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March 1, 2012 0 comment
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