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| - | [[consumer_-_customer_-_citizen_-_end-user_-_labor-_brainforce|]]; | + | <WRAP catbadge> |
| + | ====== Grid edge ====== | ||
| - | [[active_customers|]] | + | <WRAP meta> |
| + | lead-authors: | ||
| + | contributors: | ||
| + | reviewers: | ||
| + | version: 0.3 | ||
| + | updated: 26 March 2026 | ||
| + | sensitivity: | ||
| + | ai-use: Claude Sonnet 4.6 (Anthropic) was used to structure and paraphrase source material; reviewed by Vitaliy Soloviy, 26 March 2026 | ||
| + | status: draft | ||
| + | </ | ||
| - | ====== Grid Edge ====== | + | <WRAP intro> |
| + | The grid edge is the zone of the electricity system where the distribution network meets end-use installations — households, businesses, and communities that can now both consume and supply electricity. It is where distributed energy resources, flexible loads, and user-controlled assets connect to the grid, and where technical, commercial, and institutional boundaries are being actively renegotiated in smart grid transitions. | ||
| + | </ | ||
| - | + | ===== Why this matters ===== | |
| - | ===== Grid Edge – Alliance | + | The grid edge was historically passive: energy flowed from centralised generation through transmission and distribution |
| + | <WRAP callout> | ||
| + | The IEEE SGIRM defines grid edge entities as devices and systems typically installed at the load and customer end of the distribution grid, distinct from field and substation assets and from enterprise and cloud infrastructure.((IEEE. (2023). 2030.4-2023 — IEEE Guide for Control and Automation Installations Applied to the Electric Power Infrastructure. IEEE.)) | ||
| + | </ | ||
| - | ==== So What Exactly Is This “Grid Edge” Thing, Anyway? | + | ===== Shared definitions ===== |
| + | Grid edge refers to the physical and conceptual boundary between the distribution grid and end-user installations, | ||
| - | " | + | The grid edge has been characterised as the zone where consumers, prosumers, energy markets, and the smart grid interact — a space that opens up when smart, connected infrastructure |
| - | + | Three models for how actors at the grid edge can organise energy transactions have been distinguished in the literature: | |
| - | The outlet uses the term to refer to the varying hardware, software and business innovations that are increasingly enabling smart, connected infrastructure | + | ^ Model ^ Defining characteristics ^ |
| + | | **Peer-to-peer (P2P) energy trading** | A sub-market in which individuals trade energy within a community, bound locally or virtually; participants | ||
| + | | **Transactive energy (TE)** | A non-traditional business model giving end-users greater control over energy trading preferences; | ||
| + | | **Community/ | ||
| - | + | Decentralisation at the grid edge operates across three distinct dimensions — network architecture, | |
| - | "The “edge”, in this case, means the proximity to end-use customers (at their homes, businesses or at distribution systems very close to both) rather than at power plants or along transmission lines. Grid edge hardware is the physical material you can touch: solar panels, | + | ===== Perspectives ===== |
| - | [[https:// | + | <WRAP perspectives> |
| + | ==== Actors and stakeholders ==== | ||
| - | ===== Grid Edge – [Siemens] ===== | + | Grid edge participation is shaped by who owns and controls the assets at the connection point and on what terms. Prosumers, community energy groups, aggregators, |
| - | " | + | <WRAP figure> |
| + | {{: | ||
| - | Michael Weinhold, CTO, Siemens Smart Infrastructure | + | **Figure 1.** Scope of grid edge hardware, software, and business innovations. //Source: Alliance to Save Energy (2016).// |
| + | </ | ||
| - | \\ | + | @@GAP@@ Case examples needed: add one case of community grid-edge organisation (e.g. energy cooperative with local grid assets) and one case of aggregator-mediated grid edge participation from a non-EU context. |
| - | + | ||
| - | {{ : | + | ==== Technologies and infrastructure ==== |
| - | [[copyright|]] | + | Grid-edge technologies include distributed generation (rooftop solar, small wind), behind-the-meter storage (residential and commercial batteries), controllable loads (smart appliances, EV chargers, heat pumps), and local energy management systems that coordinate these assets. The SGIRM groups grid-edge entities as the load and end-use domain, distinct from field and substation assets.((IEEE. (2023). 2030.4-2023 — IEEE Guide for Control and Automation Installations Applied to the Electric Power Infrastructure. IEEE.)) Interoperability across devices, communication protocols, and market interfaces is a key constraint on how much grid-edge flexibility can actually be accessed by system operators. |
| + | @@GAP@@ Case examples needed: add one case showing a specific technology deployment at the grid edge with grid integration detail. | ||
| + | ==== Institutional structures ==== | ||
| - | ~~DISCUSSION|Discussion | + | Tariff design at the grid edge determines the economic case for investing in distributed resources and participating in flexibility markets. WG7 has identified grid-edge tariff composition — covering all forms of energy generation, storage, and flexible loads at the connection point — as a specific focus area.((Based on ISGAN WG7 focus area, legacy wiki source.)) How network charges are allocated between active and passive users, and whether grid-edge flexibility is compensated, |
| + | |||
| + | @@GAP@@ Case examples needed: add one case showing how tariff design has shaped or constrained grid-edge participation, | ||
| + | |||
| + | </ | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== Distinctions and overlaps ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | <WRAP distinction> | ||
| + | **Grid edge vs distributed energy resources (DER)**\\ | ||
| + | DER is a technology category — generation, storage, and controllable loads connected to the distribution network. Grid edge is a spatial and systemic concept — the zone where those resources connect and interact with the grid and with each other. All DER are at or near the grid edge, but grid edge also encompasses the actors, data flows, and institutional arrangements at that boundary. | ||
| + | </ | ||
| + | |||
| + | <WRAP distinction> | ||
| + | **Grid edge vs grid architecture**\\ | ||
| + | Grid architecture (SGAM, SGIRM) provides conceptual frameworks for mapping the layers and domains of the entire electricity system, including but not limited to the grid edge. Grid edge focuses specifically on the distribution-to-user boundary and the dynamics occurring there. | ||
| + | </ | ||
| + | |||
| + | <WRAP distinction> | ||
| + | **P2P trading vs community self-consumption**\\ | ||
| + | Both involve groups of users sharing energy, but P2P markets allow competitive bilateral trading with individual preferences and can span large geographical areas; CSC operates as a collective legal entity focused on shared local benefit, typically bound to the local low-voltage network.((Watson, | ||
| + | </ | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== Related topics ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | [[topics: | ||
| + | |||
| + | ~~DISCUSSION|Discussion~~ | ||