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A New Definition of Demand Response in the Distributed Energy Resource Era

Johanna L. Mathieu, Gregor Verbič, Thomas Morstyn, Mads Almassalkhi, Kyri Baker, Julio Braslavsky, Kenneth Bruninx, Yury Dvorkin, Gregory S. Ledva, Nariman Mahdavi, Hrvoje Pandžić, Alessandra Parisio, Vedran Perić

Abstract

Demand response is a concept that has been around since the very first electric power systems. However, we have seen an explosion of research on demand response and demand-side technologies in the past 30 years, coinciding with the shift towards liberalized/deregulated electricity markets and efforts to decarbonize the power sector. Now we are also seeing a shift towards more distributed/decentralized electric systems; we have entered the era of "distributed energy resources," which require new grid management, operational, and control strategies. Given this paradigm shift, we argue that the concept of demand response needs to be revisited, and more carefully/consistently defined to enable us to better utilize this massive resource for economic, technical, environmental, and societal aims. In this paper, we survey existing demand response definitions, highlight their shortcomings, propose a new definition, and describe how this new definition enables us to more effectively harness the value of demand response in modern power systems. We conclude with a demand response research agenda informed by a discussion of demand response barriers and enablers.

A New Definition of Demand Response in the Distributed Energy Resource Era

Abstract

Demand response is a concept that has been around since the very first electric power systems. However, we have seen an explosion of research on demand response and demand-side technologies in the past 30 years, coinciding with the shift towards liberalized/deregulated electricity markets and efforts to decarbonize the power sector. Now we are also seeing a shift towards more distributed/decentralized electric systems; we have entered the era of "distributed energy resources," which require new grid management, operational, and control strategies. Given this paradigm shift, we argue that the concept of demand response needs to be revisited, and more carefully/consistently defined to enable us to better utilize this massive resource for economic, technical, environmental, and societal aims. In this paper, we survey existing demand response definitions, highlight their shortcomings, propose a new definition, and describe how this new definition enables us to more effectively harness the value of demand response in modern power systems. We conclude with a demand response research agenda informed by a discussion of demand response barriers and enablers.

Paper Structure

This paper contains 36 sections, 1 figure, 2 tables.

Figures (1)

  • Figure 1: Dominant architectures for DR mechanism design and how they vary in terms of centralization and whether coordination is direct or indirect. Specific DR strategies may blend elements of these architectures and/or include multiple entities, e.g., aggregators or P2P platforms.