Projects: Projects for Investigator |
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Reference Number | EP/T023074/1 | |
Title | LATENT: RESIDENTIAL HEAT AS AN ENERGY SYSTEM SERVICE | |
Status | Started | |
Energy Categories | Energy Efficiency(Residential and commercial) 10%; Other Power and Storage Technologies(Electricity transmission and distribution) 30%; Renewable Energy Sources(Other Renewables) 60%; |
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Research Types | Basic and strategic applied research 50%; Applied Research and Development 50%; |
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Science and Technology Fields | SOCIAL SCIENCES (Sociology) 10%; ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY (Electrical and Electronic Engineering) 50%; ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY (Mechanical, Aeronautical and Manufacturing Engineering) 25%; ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY (Architecture and the Built Environment) 15%; |
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UKERC Cross Cutting Characterisation | Sociological economical and environmental impact of energy (Consumer attitudes and behaviour) 50%; Sociological economical and environmental impact of energy (Technology acceptance) 25%; Sociological economical and environmental impact of energy (Other sociological economical and environmental impact of energy) 25%; |
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Principal Investigator |
Dr PAB (Patrick ) James No email address given Faculty of Engineering and the Environment University of Southampton |
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Award Type | Standard | |
Funding Source | EPSRC | |
Start Date | 01 October 2020 | |
End Date | 30 September 2025 | |
Duration | 60 months | |
Total Grant Value | £1,314,091 | |
Industrial Sectors | Construction; Energy | |
Region | South East | |
Programme | Energy : Energy | |
Investigators | Principal Investigator | Dr PAB (Patrick ) James , Faculty of Engineering and the Environment, University of Southampton (99.997%) |
Other Investigator | Professor AS (AbuBakr ) Bahaj , Faculty of Engineering and the Environment, University of Southampton (0.001%) Dr M Manfren , Sch of Engineering, University of Southampton (0.001%) Dr S Gauthier , Sch of Engineering, University of Southampton (0.001%) |
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Industrial Collaborator | Project Contact , Southampton City Council (0.000%) Project Contact , PassivSystems Limited (0.000%) Project Contact , Isle of Wight Council (0.000%) Project Contact , Portsmouth City Council (0.000%) Project Contact , Samsung Electronics Research Institute (0.000%) Project Contact , NquiringMinds Ltd (0.000%) |
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Web Site | ||
Objectives | ||
Abstract | The UK's carbon targets, as defined by the Climate Change Act of 2008, specify an emissions reduction of 80% by 2050, which the government has recently revised down to 'net zero' for the same year. In 2017, 17% of the UK's carbon emissions were associated with non-electric use in the residential sector (64.1 Mt CO2), the majority of which were associated with natural gas space heating, cooking and domestic hot water. The UK must therefore decarbonise residential heat to be able to meet its climate change targets, but, in combination with electric vehicles (EVs), this could lead to a 200-300% increase in the UK's annual electricity demand.In terms of deployment at scale, Air Source Heat Pumps (ASHP) operating either in isolation or as a hybrid gas system appear a key technology as they are not site specific and are applicable to both new build housing and retrofit. The UK's low voltage (LV) electricity network will not however, be able to operate with unconstrained electrical heating or EV charging loads. Both loads must be deferrable or scheduled in a manner to support the electricity network and maintain substations and feeders within limits.Household electric heating has the potential to operate as a significant deferrable load which LATENT is seeking to understand and harness. This can provide benefits across scales, namely to the UK (energy security and carbon targets), DNO (Distributed Network Operator as grid support), heat pump suppliers (by demonstrating added grid value), householders (in terms of bill reduction and avoidance of peaking dynamic tariffs) and electricity suppliers by applying aggregation techniques to minimise energy service costs.The key aim of LATENT therefore, is to be able to predict the impact of customers with electrical heating (predominantly ASHP) operating with 3rd party deferrable heating control on the LV network at the feeder / substation level. 3rd party control in this context would be through the energy service supplier, with whom, unlike the DNO, a household has an existing financial contract relationship. LATENT will inform industry of the potential of 3rd party control of deferrable heat through a rigorous field experiment, and, in doing so, accelerate the transition to decarbonised household heating.LATENT will determine the influence of householder personality trait (OCEAN traits: either positive / negative as Openness, Conscientiousness, Extraversion, Agreeableness, Neuroticism) alongside more traditional Census metrics such as educational attainment, house type etc to deliver a multi-variate regression model to describe deferrable heat reduction at the household level. A substation or feeder can then be analysed in terms of its household type mix (10% C+ detached, 30% E- flat etc) to produce a composite substation level, deferrable heat reduction estimate.This model will be realised through field trials with LATENT's industrial partner, Igloo Energy.Igloo have a customer base with smart heating systems and ASHP which support remote 3rd party control. LATENT will test (i) householder's stated acceptance to deferral of heating (in terms of temperature drop and duration) through focus groups and surveys, (ii) actual acceptance of heat deferral through heating season field trials, and (iii) operation of a commercial deferrable heat tariff with a sample of Igloo's customer base. | |
Data | No related datasets |
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Projects | No related projects |
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Publications | No related publications |
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Added to Database | 07/10/21 |