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* België * Deutschland * España * France * Italia * Nederland * Österreich * Polska * Suisse Contact * Home * Products * About * Energy Blog * Knowledge Energy Services Trading Power Scheduling Balancing Energy NEMOCS - VPP Platform VPP Software as a Service Forecasting & Nowcasting Dispatch & Optimization Ancillary Services Curtailment Services Demand Response Consulting Renewable Energy Consulting & Training About Company Vacancies Newsletter Research Projects Virtual Power Plant Concept & Technology Case Studies VPP Simulation VPP Design Events Webinars Events Press News Contact Contact us REMIT data Cookie Policy Recent Articles Rising Electricity Prices in Germany – a Renewables Booster Python configuration files made easy: get to know our new open source library Opening the aFRR Market in Belgium If you want change, you need the courage to change Flexibility in the Electricity System: What does it Actually Mean? The (electric) engine is running – How to use EVs for grid balancing Background Consequences of energy system transformation Who is disrupting the utility frequency? The dance of production and consumption Decentralized energy, seen through the eyes of a power trader How to balance supply and demand on new electricity markets Service How Are Units in a VPP Selected to Provide Ancillary Services? The Top 10 Questions When Planning a Virtual Power Plant What’s the business model of a Virtual Power Plant (VPP)? 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Learn more about the purpose of this network and the technology that powers our VPP. Get in touch WHAT IS THE OBJECTIVE OF A VIRTUAL POWER PLANT? Depending on the particular market environment, VPPs can accomplish a whole range of tasks. In general, the objective is to network distributed energy resources in order to monitor, forecast, optimize and trade their power. This way, fluctuations in the generation of renewables can be balanced by ramping up and down power generation and power consumption of controllable units. But the VPP not only helps stabilizing the power grids. It also creates the preconditions for integrating renewable energies into the markets. Individual small plants can in general not provide balancing services or offer their flexibility on the power exchanges. This is because their generation profile varies too strongly or they simply do not meet the minimum bid size of the markets. By aggregating the power of several units, a VPP can deliver the same service and redundancy and subsequently trade on the same markets as large central power plants or industrial consumers. CONTROL SYSTEM: HIGH-PERFORMANCE DATA PROCESSING The control system is the technological core of the Virtual Power Plant. All assets, that are networked in the VPP, can be efficiently monitored, coordinated and controlled by the central control system. Control commands and data are transmitted via secured data connections which are shielded from other data traffic due to encryption protocols. The control system stores all the data needed to calculate the optimal operation schedules for electricity producers and consumers. These are for example: * Actual power * Readiness of the power plant or the power consumer * Performance range for balancing energy * Gas or heat storage * Actual temperature (for example in a cold store) * Water levels (for example for an industrial pump) In addition to operating every individual asset in the VPP along an optimized schedule, the central control system uses a special algorithm to adjust to balancing reserve commands from transmission system operators, just as larger conventional power plants do. The bidirectional data exchange between the individual plants and the VPP not only enables the transmission of control commands. It also provides real-time data on the capacity utilization of the networked units. For example, the feed-in of wind energy and solar plants, as well as consumption data and electricity storage charge levels, can be used to generate precise forecasts for electricity trading and scheduling of the controllable power plants. NEXT BOX: SECURE CONNECTION TO THE VPP The Next Box is a remote control unit, that allows to connect decentralized power producers and consumers to the control system of the VPP. The Next Box connects the plants via a bidirectional, specially secured (tunneld) wireless connection by using the IEC 60870-5-104 telecontrol protocol. The connection is established via a SIM card and has its own access point to the mobile network (APN). At this access point, each SIM card installed in a Next Box must authenticate itself to join the closed user group for communication with the control system. The basic configuration of the Next Box consists of three elements: * PLC (Programmable Logic Controller): A small computer, which processes and encrypts the raw operating data of the installation. * Modem: Provides a communications link between the remote unit and the control system. * Antenna: Amplifies the signal reception and can be located up to 15 m from the Next Box if necessary, for example, on the roof of a building. If the Next Box is installed on site, the plant becomes part of the Virtual Power Plant. It can now send all the data that forms the basis for calculating the optimum way it should be operated directly to our control system. Even though we are able to control the networked units via the Next Box, the individual units remain independently owned and operated. OUR VPP We operate one of Europe's largest VPPs. Be part of it YOUR VPP Create your own VPP with our Software as a Service. Learn more NEWSLETTER Get the latest news from our VPP and the energy industry. 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