go to top scroll for more

C-AWARE: Enabling Consumer Awareness of Carbon Footprint Through Mobile Service Innovation (Cambridge/Nottingham/Exeter)

Reference Number
EP/I000240/1
Title
C-AWARE: Enabling Consumer Awareness of Carbon Footprint Through Mobile Service Innovation (Cambridge/Nottingham/Exeter)
Status
Completed
Energy Categories
Energy Efficiency(Residential and commercial)
Energy Efficiency(Transport)
Research Types
Basic and strategic applied research
Science and Technology Fields
SOCIAL SCIENCES (Economics and Econometrics)
SOCIAL SCIENCES (Sociology)
SOCIAL SCIENCES (Psychology)
PHYSICAL SCIENCES AND MATHEMATICS (Computer Science and Informatics)
ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY (Architecture and the Built Environment)
UKERC Cross Cutting Characterisation
Sociological economical and environmental impact of energy (Consumer attitudes and behaviour)
Sociological economical and environmental impact of energy (Technology acceptance)
Sociological economical and environmental impact of energy (Other sociological economical and environmental impact of energy)
Principal Investigator
Professor D McAuley
Computer Science
University of Nottingham
Award Type
Standard
Funding Source
EPSRC
Start Date
01 August 2010
End Date
31 July 2012
Duration
24 months
Total Grant Value
£122,790
Industrial Sectors
Energy
Region
East Midlands
Programme
Energy Multidisciplinary Applications
Investigators
Principal Investigator
Professor D McAuley, Computer Science, University of Nottingham
Other Investigator
Dr MC Gillott, Architecture and Built Environment, University of Nottingham
Professor C O'Malley, Psychology, University of Nottingham
Professor T Rodden, Computer Science, University of Nottingham
Industrial Collaborator
Project Contact, Research Partner in China
Web Site
Objectives
Nore : This grant is linked to grants EP/I000186/1 and EP/I000828/1
Abstract
C-AWARE is directed at providing applications to inform consumers of the impact of their behaviour on their carbon footprint, in the context of home energy use and transport. It is a two year feasibility study.There is body of knowledge about sensors, sensor networks, and aggregation of sensor information on which we can build. But while there are a number of systems for monitoring and informingconsumers about energy use, these tend to be closed systems in which the information service provide controls the infrastructure, be this an energy provider, a road traffic information system, or a building management system.The assumptions which underlie this work are threefold:i) that globally deployed solutions will use mobile phones to interact with users (since in many parts of the world this is the only information infrastructure);ii) that there is a gap in our knowledge about how information applications can influence user behaviour both individually and as a collective; andiii) that we require platforms that both give flexibility to allow the rapid evolution of deployed applications, and are commercially viable.This is not a technology development study; the building blocks - sensor networks and mobile handsets - are available. It is an examination of two distinct but interacting challenges:(i) developing and evolving compelling and influential energy information applications; and(ii) providing a large scale commercial platform on which this development and evolution can be undertaken by independent application providers in light of observed behaviour.In each case the specific instances (energy awareness application, sensor aggregation) and general methodologies (user-centric application development, intermediate network services) will be examined. To meet these challenges we have brought together a multidisciplinary team from Cambridge, Nottingham, Exeter, and China Mobile. The expertise includes business modelling, networking and distributed systems, security,psychology, and sociology.China Mobile have allocated $100k in personnel and other costs to this project.China Mobile, the world's largest mobile operator are a key partner in this project, having demonstrated a willingness to entertain business models and deploy intermediate services - such as aggregation of sensor information - to allow application innovation by third parties.As well as providing insights into the problems described (and many subproblems) the main output of this project will transferred to commercial exploitation via China Mobile or one of its global partners and via the Horizon Digital Economy Hub at Nottingham and Cambridge
Data

No related datasets

Projects

No related projects

Publications

No related publications

Added to Database
09/06/10