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This project ended in Jul 2023 and is now closed.

Demand Forecasting Encapsulating Domestic Efficiency Retrofits (DEFENDER)

Funding mechanismNetwork Innovation Allowance (NIA)
DurationMar 2022 - Jul 2023
Project expenditure£916K
Research areaNet zero and the Energy System Transition
Regions
  • South West
  • South Wales
  • West Midlands
  • East Midlands
  • July 2023

    A dissemination webinar on the learnings of the DEFENDER project was held on Zoom on Thursday 8th June. The recording of the event can be found here

Objective(s)

Develop an understanding of the electricity demand profile of UK domestic building stock pre- and post-retrofits to building fabric. Produce a methodology for integrating pre- and post-retrofit domestic demand profiles into network forecasting. Assess the potential savings on network reinforcement and flexibility from accounting for energy efficiency in demand forecasting. Perform an economic assessment of the potential benefits to networks from increased penetration of domestic retrofit interventions.

Problem(s)

Net Zero decarbonisation of domestic building stock is expected to be achieved through a combination of: low carbon heating (primarily through electrified heat pumps); smart tariffs and demand management incentive schemes; and energy efficiency retrofits of building fabric. Understanding the net effect of these measures in combination is crucial for accurate electricity network forecasting, but the representation of this interactivity in forecasting best practice is minimal. In particular, the influence of building fabric on heat pump performance, as modulated by energy efficiency retrofits, is captured in limited fashion. As such, future domestic electricity demand, and therefore network reinforcement requirements, may currently be overestimated. Furthermore, it is currently unknown where there is a business case for DNOs promote adoption of energy efficiency measures as a cost-effective option to mediate or obviate reinforcement or flexibility costs.

Method(s)

The DEFENDER project will develop, through two workstreams, the capability of electricity networks to accurately assess the impact of energy efficiency retrofits on current and future demand, and understanding of the business case for retrofit investment as an alternative to reinforcement.

Workstream 0 – Specification This workstream will carry out workshops with all project partners and National Grid engineers to produce the specification for the Workstream 1 demand profiling tool and the Workstream 2 investment appraisal tool.

Workstream 1 – Development of Pre- and Post-Retrofit Profiling Tool This workstream will create an analysis tool capable of generating domestic ADMDs and load profiles based on actual heat data for alarge number of property types for use in network forecasting and planning. This will be achieved through integrating a number of inputs:

  • A smart meter database of 15,000 homes’ gas and electricity consumption data owned by Hildebrand, a project partner.
  • Heat Transfer Coefficients (HTC) from the SMETERS project, which used BEIS validated algorithms to calculate building thermal performance from smart meter data.
  • A Building Decarbonisation Options Appraisal Tool developed by Carbon Trust, a project partner, which can determine the impact of retrofit measures on the building’s heat loss factor (U value).
  • The Energy Performance of Buildings Register, which contains EPCs for homes in England and Wales, which include heating and fabric data amongst other useful information.
  • Local weather data.

The workstream will consist of the following work packages:

WP1.1. Tool development part one: Pre- and post-retrofit demand ADMD and half-hourly profiles.

This work package will develop the capability for simulating historical and future power demands, taking into account different energy efficiency measures. A model will be trained on the smart meter dataset to be capable of deriving before and after building fabric retrofit heat demand and quantify this as historical and future ADMD and load profiles, including transference of gas demand to electricity demand.

WP1.2. Tool development part two: Network planning outputs

This work package will develop the capability for using machine learning techniques on the profiles developed in WP1 to cluster houses into housing archetypes and calculate mean annual load profiles and ADMDs for each archetype with and without energy efficiency measures.

WP1.3. Testing of profiling tool

This work package will develop, agree and implement a system integration and user acceptance (UAT) process for the profiling tool between project partners. Following successful approval of the tool after testing, it will develop the necessary handover materials.

WP1.4. Applying the profiling tool to DFES forecasting

This work package will define a methodology will be defined for applying the outputs of the profiling tool to Distribution Future Energy Scenario (DFES) modelling. The utility of the new profiles will then be analysed with a network case study. The outcomes of these studies will be compared and contrasted with National Grid’s existing forecasts using its current profiles and alternative approaches as identified by a literature review.

WP1.5. Cost-benefit analysis of energy efficiency improvement

This work package will carry out a cost-benefit analysis of the value to network operators of investment in the energy efficiency of homes. This will be done in two ways: firstly by conducting a CBA of investment in energy efficiency per house archetype and the case study area in WP1.4, and secondly by transforming the outputs of the profiling tool into inputs to the retrofit investment tool developed in Workstream 2.

Workstream 2 – Appraising Investment in Energy Efficiency

This workstream will carry out an economic analysis of the business case and opportunities for National Grid to promote energy efficiency retrofit. It will support this analysis with the creation of a tool for constraint management optioneering capable of assessing the value of energy efficiency retrofit, while accounting for the uncertainty in investment outcomes. This tool will be developed for a limited area of National Grid Electricity Distribution’s network, with a view to ensuring its building blocks are reusable as part of potential further economic analysis around energy efficiency.

WP2.1. Development of investment appraisal tool

This work package will develop the economic assessment methodology and investment appraisal tool in R or Python in agile fashion, based on the specification document, with regular feedback to National Grid and updates to the design document.

WP2.2. Analysis and insights

This work package will carry out an economic analysis using the investment appraisal tool to consider the conditions where the value from energy efficiency retrofits is most certain for electricity networks. It will evaluate the outputs of the investment appraisal tool and assess what the outcomes mean at various scales (e.g. strategic business plan level vs day-to-day operational) and will analyse the remaining knowledge gaps. It will capture the existing regulatory and commercial context for electricity networks on energy efficiency, assessing the possibilities within existing strictures and the opportunities that may develop in the future.