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Smart Cities Powered
by Smart Grids
Agenda
Smart cities examples
Smart cities overview
Intersection: Smart grids and smart cities
Key considerations
Three takeaways
Smart Grid Consumer Collaborative
Membership From 50 to 130 organizations
For stakeholders Longest longitudinal study of energy consumers
8,500 interviews
6+ years of baseline data
Segmentation framework
Messaging toolkits
For consumers Fact sheets
Videos
Web site
Social media
Smart CitiesCouncil
Industry coalition
Accelerating progress by advising and
educating cities
Joining forces to help communities
120+ member and advisor organizations employing…
1.5 million+ people generating…
$2.7 trillion+ in annual revenues that have worked on…
10,000+ smart city projects past and present
Smart Cities Council
Largest collection of FREE
resources
World’s most widely used handbook
Best Practices
PDF or
online
200+case
studies
All over the world,
cities are transforming
Transportationis transforming
Amsterdam Future Bus
Buildingsare transforming
UK's first truly zero carbon business park
Public Safety is transforming
Oakland, CA Body cameras
Complaints down 74%
Water is
transformingMumbai was losing 50%of its water to leaks and theft
Healthcareis transforming
Cloud enables home monitoring for patients with chronic diseases
Energyis transforming
Chattanooga, Tennessee
“Self-healing” grid / 65% more reliable
+ Gigabit Internet
Energyis transforming
RenewablesDistributed generation
MicrogridsEnergy efficiency
The city-citizen
relationshipis transforming
Boston posts its “report card” every day
Happier for less
Happierfor less
DubaiNowsmartphone app
$1 billion saved
Agenda
Smart cities examples
Smart cities overview
Intersection: Smart grids and smart cities
Key considerations
Three takeaways
3 components
of a Smart City
Co
mm
un
icate
2
Co
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ute
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Co
llect
1
Existing sensors
Collect via citywide sensor networks
New sensors Vehicles Smartphones
A FitBit for the city Streets tell us if they are congested
Buildings
tell us their conditions
Communicate: citywide networks
3 kinds
of applications
Compute:
1. Situational awareness
Descriptive
2. Predictive analytics
Predictive
3. Real-time optimization
Prescriptive
1simple framework
Agenda
Smart cities examples
Smart cities overview
Intersection: Smart grids and smart cities
Key considerations
Three takeaways
Utilities are
essentialto smart city
success
27
The two pillars of a smart cityE
ne
rgy
Te
lec
om
©2015 Modern Grid Solutions LLC and Smart Cities Council LLC
What is Energy’s role in Smart Cities?
Cools, heats, and lights homes and businesses
Pumps water and processes the food we eat
Fuels cars, subways and trains
Electricity along with telecommunications is one of the two pillars of a smart city
28
All infrastructures that cities use to produce and deliver
electricity, gas, steam, renewables, etc.
What are Key Dependencies in Energy?
29
Energy <--> Water
Power generation
Pump and treat water and wastewater
Extract and refine fuel
©2015 Modern Grid Solutions LLC and Smart Cities Council LLC
Energy <--> Transportation
Electric vehicles
Power traffic lights, street lights, etc.
Fuel to power plants
Energy <--> Communications
Operation of cell towers, data centers
Two-way communications for electric grid
Energy <--> Built Environment
Home/office HVAC, appliances, etc.
Power plants, solar/wind farms, distributed generation
30
What are the Benefits of Smart Energy?
Livability
Improving reliability and resilience
Customer choice and control
Lowering costs for citizens
©2015 Modern Grid Solutions LLC and Smart Cities Council LLC
Workability
Creating new jobs
Generating business
investment in cities
Competitive advantage
Sustainability
Renewable energy sources
Reducing energy operating costs
Energy conservation
5
Resilience
Microgrids
Distributed generation,
renewables and storage
Smart buildings
Smart street lightsWhere cities and utilities
immediately encounter
each other
Intersectingtrends
Smart Street Lights
Don’t miss this opportunity
Don’t overlook the many smart city applications
Think “future-friendly”
Agenda
Smart cities examples
Smart cities overview
Intersection: Smart grids and smart cities
Key considerations
Three takeaways
5key challenges
Technology – What should we do? Greatest confusion: How to do it cross-cutting
Great fears: Privacy and cybersecurity
Financing – How do we pay for it? Growing consensus around public/private partnerships
Policy – How do we regulate it? Unleash the opportunities while safeguarding citizens
Stakeholder engagement – How partner? Must have early engagement
Plan with all so you can build for all
Governance – How do we organize? Who leads? Who owns and manages?
How do we break down the silos?
8 key stakeholders
Residents / workers / tourists
Utilities
Business
Universities
Neighboring towns and cities
Federal / state / provincial
City departments
The disadvantaged Disabled, low-income, homeless,
elderly, under-served neighborhoods
8 key issues
Optimal instrumentation
When, where, what, how share
Interoperability
Communications, data
Connectivity
Multi-purpose networks
Analytics
Sharing data, sharing tools
Privacy
Security
Smart buildings
What do you need to know?
New business models
What businesses do you want to be in?
What businesses do they want you in?
Agenda
Smart cities examples
Smart cities overview
Intersection: Smart grids and smart cities
Key considerations
Three takeaways
3takeaways to
ponder
Who owns the customer relationship?
That organization owns the future
Economies of scope
Sharing assets, infrastructure, costs
Value to volume continuum
Where do you want to end up
Who owns the customer
relationship?
Economies of
Scope
Create additional value from ratepayer-financed assets
Share infrastructure Share costs Share data
41
Economies of Scope
The volume to value continuum
Infrastructure Intermediary Innovator
Commodity Electrons Value-Added Services
Agenda
Smart cities examples
Smart cities overview
Intersection: Smart grids and smart cities
Key considerations
Three takeaways
Questions and comments
City officials and citizens Attend our events
Download our free guides
Request a Readiness Workshop
Apply for a Challenge Grant
Academics, researchers, NGOs Join our Advisory Board
Share your research and findings
Utilities Join as a Utility Partner
Participate on the Utilities Task Force
Participate in #UtilitiesAdvancingCities
Vendors and suppliers Join and contribute best practices and case studies
Please help us
help cities
Let’s continue the dialogue
Jesse Berst, [email protected]