News

Scientists from VUB lead EU-Horizon 2020 energy grid project

Scientists from VUB lead EU-Horizon 2020 energy grid project

Scientists from VUB’s MOBI research group are leading an EU consortium that’s spearheading the transition to renewable energy sources and could ultimately reduce costs for consumers. RENAISSANCE, supported by the EU’s Horizon 2020 research programme, is a community-driven and scalable approach seeking innovative ways to optimise the efficiency of local power grids. As the Project coordinator Professor Thierry Coosemans states, “Local consumers want low-cost, hassle-free energy at their disposal: the key challenge is to support the shift from technology-driven approaches to consumer-driven approaches, envisioning more efficient distribution grids.”

The aim of the RENAISSANCE project is to balance consumption and production of wind and solar power via local micro-grids in which citizens and businesses are both consumers and producers. Local grids also allow for energy trading within and among communities, increasing the amount of locally produced energy and the share of renewable energy as a whole. “Connected energy communities are considered top players by RENAISSANCE,” says Prof. Coosemans. “Its ambition is to significantly improve the uptake of local integrated renewable energy grids and likely reduce consumer prices by at least 10-15%.”

To drive innovations for clean production and shared distribution of energy, the RENAISSANCE project has created real-world energy communities at four demo sites: Brussels Health Campus in Jette, a ski resort in Spain, a university campus in Greece and a small residential town in the Netherlands. Each site represents different end-user groups, integrates a different combination of energy vectors and faces diverse challenges in the design of local power grids.

Read more.

Source: “VUB scientists lead EU-Horizon 2020 energy grid project”, Thierry Coosemans, Vrije Universiteit Brussels

Tags: