Smart Sustainable Cities and Communities: Status Report of...

Post on 25-Sep-2020

3 views 0 download

Transcript of Smart Sustainable Cities and Communities: Status Report of...

1

Smart Sustainable Cities and Communities: Status Report of Triple Helix Projects in Norway Annemie Wyckmans & many others NTNU Faculty of Architecture and Fine Art Japan-Norway Energy Science Week, Tokyo, 26-29 May 2015

http://www.ntnu.edu/smartcities LinkedIn: «Smarte byer og bygder»

Cities as polluters

Smart Sustainable Cities

=

Energy-Efficient, Climate-Resilient, Health-Promoting,

Inclusive & Attractive by default

Smart Sustainable Cities

Smart Grids

Energy Systems Integration

Zero Emission Buildings /

Neighbourhoods Solar Wind Industries

? ?

Smart City: From Science to Practice (and back)

How can research contribute? Now In 20 years from now

What kind of research is needed now in order to help cities reach their long-term visions in terms of energy, greenhouse gas emissions and sustainability?

How can we contribute to develop the right indicators and assessment methods to help cities in their transformation to a low carbon society?

How can we contribute to provide science-based information as decision support for cities that need to make risky decisions? (i.e., not business as usual)

Lots of definitions, some common ground Designed as urban innovation ecosystems

Use of ICT-enabled systems and tools

Tackle complex environmental and sustainability challenges

Optimize performance of urban infrastructures, services & processes

Towards a low-carbon society with high quality of life

Smart technologies

Wireless Trondheim

& MazeMap

Tracking movement

patterns indoors & outdoors

to learn more about how

spaces are used

Contact persons John Krogstie (NTNU) &

Thomas Jelle (MazeMap)

Smart people What does having customised information at all times mean for our dialy lives,

for the manner in which we use buildings and the city?

Illustration: EU project «MyNeighbourhood»; Contact person Sobah Petersen (SINTEF Technology and Society)

10

Annemie Wyckmans, 24.oktober 2013, Inneklimadagen Oslo

Smart Design: Robust integration When everything functions as intended we hardly notice it…

11

Annemie Wyckmans, 24.oktober 2013, Inneklimadagen Oslo

… while poor design and errors are perceived very quickly, can create severe hindrances in our daily lives, and diminish our quality of life

Integrated infrastructures – Urban ecosystems Who is responsible for the integration between different sectors? Energy Water Transport Buildings Green structures ICT Waste Food ...

Powerhouse Kjørbo; Sandvika / Bærum ; Illustration SNØHETTA / MIR. www.zeb.no

Towards Zero Emission Buildings

Powerhouse Kjørbo; Sandvika / Bærum ; Illustration SNØHETTA / MIR

Towards Zero Emission Buildings

IEA Task 51 Solar Energy in Urban Planning http://task51.iea-shc.org/ Photo: Gabriele Lobaccaro

SINTEF & NTNU (KPI-SEC)

Key Performance Indicators for Smart Energy Communities

Energy use per capita; Energy use per unit of GDP; Reserves-to-production ratio; Non-carbon energy share in energy and electricity; Net energy import dependency; Percentage of income spent on energy; Storage capacity; Security of supply, etc

Total residential electrical energy use per capita; Percentage of city populations with authorized electrical service; Energy consumption of public buildings; Percentage from renewables of total energy use; Impact on teh electricity network; Air pollution; Charging networks; Intelligent transport systems; Average commuting times; Value of fuel savings etc

Reductions in CO2 emissions; Life cycle costs; Air pollution; Import and export of energy; K2H/m2 per hours of occupancy; CO2/travel km; Distance to public transport nodes; Frequency of public transport; Cycling networks; Integration of RES; Intelligent transport facilities etc

Energy demand in kWh/m2 floor area; Delivered and primary energy in kWh/m2 floor area; Power demand; CO2 emissions from materials, construction and operation; Life cycle energy costs; Load match and grid interaction indicators; User interaction etc

Country Level City Level District Level Building Level

COST TU0902 iaforcities.com Integrated Assessment of Cities

Integrated assessment methods e.g. London http://www.ncl.ac.uk/ceser/researchprogramme/integratedsystemsdemonstrationscities/

Contact person: Richard Dawson (Newcastle University)

www.ramses-cities.eu

RAMSES Reconciling Climate Change Adaptation, Mitigation and Sustainable Development in Cities

ZenN Near Zero Energy Neighbourhoods. Energy Efficient Renovation of Domestic Building Blocks www.zenn-fp7.eu

COSSMIC Collaborating Smart Solar-Powered Microgrids www.cossmic.eu

Governance and Public Participation

1919 – 1922: Energy fficiency test buildings at NTNU campus

2014: ZEB Living Lab & Test Cell

Long-Term Planning, Acting & Monitoring

Urban Lab Trondheim Landuse & transportation planning ZEB buildings Smart Cities Low energy/ emission neighborhood planning Health promoting areas Social inclusion & participatory processes Urban governance Public space and Art

Kunnskap for en bedre verden 25 Contact person: Hogne Nersund Larsen (Asplan Viak) & Simon Loveland (Trondheim municipality)

Engagement of professional and end user communities Research + Industry + Public governance + Citizens + Funding organisations + Insurance + Politicians + ...

Norwegian cooperation on smart cities

Capacity building

Project workshops

Mobilisation workshops

Presentation of regional activities

www.eera-sc.eu

Skien

Bodø

Stavanger

Bergen

Trondheim

Oslo

Kristiansand

Stavanger won a prestigious European Horizon 2020 project as smart city lighthouse in 2014. Trondheim has applied, with support of NTNU, SINTEF and a range of local companies, in 2015

Kunnskap for en bedre verden 30 Contact persons: Eivind Sommerseth (Research Council Norway) & Asgeir Jordbru (Bodø municipality)

Triple Helix Cooperation between cities, industry & research to optimise knowledge transfer and

learning, document experiences, and avoid mistakes already made by others

COST Action TU0902

www.eera-sc.eu

EU-skyggegruppen har som formål å øke norsk deltagelse i EU-prosjekter og –nettverk tilknyttet energieffektive bygninger / smarte byer og tettsteder. Prosjektet kjøres av NTNU og SINTEF Byggforsk, og er finansiert av

Medvirkningsordningen til Norges forskningsråd, prosjektnummer 235153 . Epost: smartcities@ab.ntnu.no, LinkedIN: Smarte byer og bygder; Nettside: http://www.ntnu.edu/smartcities

www.eera-set.eu

66 research centres & universities, incl 2 umbrella organizations & 5 industry partners 262 person years per year Support transformation towards smart, energy-efficient, liveable, sustainable cities in EU

Joint Program Smart Cities A virtual centre of excellence within EERA European Energy Research Alliance

Contact persons in Norway: Annemie Wyckmans (NTNU)

& Mads Mysen (SINTEF Byggforsk)

City Advisory Board (2/deltagerland)

Norge: Trondheim & Oslo

(2014 – 2016)

Coordination Meeting Review JP Smart Cities, Vienna,

26 February 2013

A new role for buildings in generating, distributing, consuming, storing, and saving energy at urban scale

?

34

Identifying / Measuring Added Value

What happens around 2018 – 2020 when all new buildings become NZEB? (EPBD) When all buildings need to generate part of their own energy => interaction with the grid, with other buildings is a core issue What kind of added value are we looking for?

• Primary Energy • User Services • Quality of Energy (optimal energy use) • Scale

•Quantification of Rebound Effect

•Link to indicators •Cities website Level 3 Activity: Knowledge Platform

USER

BUILDING

CITY

MOBILITY

35

KPIs for Energy-efficient Interactive Buildings in Smart Cities (EeIB)

What is the role of buildings in Smart Cities?

• Definition / Vision of EeIB • Key Performance Indicators for EeIB (KPI) • Assessment of Added Value / Cost of EeIB

Methodology for developing KPIs • Quantitative & qualitative • Purpose of KPI (design, evaluation, modelling, performance, informative, regulation…)

• Target group for KPI (city managers, grid operators, researchers, general public…)

• Establish priorities (core dimensions, parameters, data)

• Establish co-benefits & conflicts (e.g., efficiency vs adaptation, redundancy)

• Specify temporal and spatial level (building, neighborhood/district, municipality,…)

• Benchmarking – Transferability across cities

KPIs

Building – Energy System Integration

36

Building – Energy System Integration

Design and operation of buildings as active optimal components in the eenrgy system of the Smart City

Optimisation parameters • Available flexibility (see NB!) • Renovation-level • Building typologies, design process • Integration of renewables / mix of energy resources

Constraints • Comfort/User behaviour • Development over lifetime / usage of buildings • Robustness of energy system • National policies • General lack of information/representative data

NB! The main function of the building will always be a place where people live/work – first priority

KPIs

Building – Energy System Integration

37

Added value Smart buildings / cities do things for people that they would not do themselves • Services • What are you optimizing for? E.g., GHG, cost, energy, comfort, resilience (all? Service with the least amount of impact) • Optimizing at which scale ? Building + District + City

• How to identify potential conflicts, co-benefits, synergies? • How to identify opportunities for intervention? Need for Key Performance Indicators • A way to systemize, common repository of data • Measure towards which you can optimise, decision support • Hierarchical approach for optimization and control structure • Validate modelling/prediction – real-world performance • Benchmark for comparison, improvement

KPIs

Building – Energy System Integration

+

38

Feedback summary

Requirements for KPIs: • Concise – not too many KPIs • Being dynamic, how they are varying together • Correct scale (Building to neighbourhood/district, clusters, not individual • Upgrading existing policy/framework in cities, models, regulations • KPIs linking buildings to Smart Cities (bottom up + top down) • Representation of the rest of the system when designing buildings (e.g., what does “flexibility” mean?)

KPIs

Building – Energy System Integration

Buildings

Smart Cities

39

Feedback summary

KPIs should reflect how people are using buildings & the city • Qualitative • Quantitative (e.g count how many people use green areas/common areas/public

spaces and for how long do they use it and for which purposes (ref study in Denmark by Jan Gehl)

• Socio technical systems, e.g. the aging society

• Energy budget for people (smart phone – cost og comfort) • Cheap loans for EEIB • Incentives for developers/owners

KPIs

Building – Energy System Integration

40

Feedback summary

KPIs should assure adaptability (short / long term) for many parameters e.g. • Climate change • Regulations • Cost issues • Different usages of the building over the lifetime, day/night etc • Demand energy response • Include innovation, e.g. in terms of RES, storage • Include probability of future events

Resilience of building – energy systems integration: • Security – Robustness • Flexibility – Connectivity – Cascading effects • Responsiveness – Hierarchy • Redundancy – Diversity • …

KPIs

Building – Energy System Integration

41

Towards a Knowledge Platform for Energy-Efficient Interactive Buildings

• Distinction according to beneficiaries • Cases and pilots • Data sets (open) and protocols – involvement of industry? • Business models • Information from different levels (Buildings, cities, regional and national) • Systems for forecast and load management (Production, weather and load) • Development and sharing of tools and applications • Supporting ICT structure • Systemic approach development • EU wide database on user / energy data

Level 2 Activity: Repository of all SP3 output on the EERA JP Smart Cities website Level 3 Activity: Knowledge Platform

Smart Sustainable Cities

Smart Grids

Energy Systems Integration

Zero Emission Buildings /

Neighbourhoods Solar Wind Industries

? ?

43

Smart Sustainable Cities and Communities: Status Report of Triple Helix Projects in Norway Annemie Wyckmans & many others NTNU Faculty of Architecture and Fine Art Japan-Norway Energy Science Week, Tokyo, 26-29 May 2015

http://www.ntnu.edu/smartcities LinkedIn: «Smarte byer og bygder»