AI is transforming the grid. Here’s how. – World Economic Forum

Posted: September 16, 2021 at 6:47 am

The worlds energy systems are changing. Driven by strong demand for clean energy and mounting impacts from climate-driven extreme weather, entities around the world are setting ambitious goals to reduce emissions from the fossil fuels that have powered economic growth for over a century.

The majority of emissions come from three sectors: electricity generation, transportation and buildings. Steep increases in renewables will reduce electric sector emissions and power new loads from transportation and buildings. But the grid must undergo profound changes for this to occur.

Electricity will drive global decarbonisation. The future grid must first be clean. No feasible, affordable path exists to replace gasoline with a carbon-free liquid fuel for vehicles, nor natural gas with a carbon-free alternative for cooking and heating. No path, that is, apart from electrifying vehicles and buildings, which is recognised as the lowest-cost, lowest-risk decarbonisation strategy.

Clean electricity will drive emissions reductions across the economy. Some renewable energy will still come from power plants, but those can be difficult to build, as can be the long transmission lines that bring power to users. By contrast, local renewables can provide clean, affordable power directly to customers more easily, making it decentralised.

The future grid will address key challenges: power outages and economic losses from extreme weather. With these events becoming more frequent and severe, maintaining the grids century-old, centralised architecture is a costly proposition. It must be resilient.

With renewables, growth and variation in electricity services as well as significant unpredictability in supply and demand, the grid must become dynamic. And in order for that grid to function, it must be smart.

Thats where artificial intelligence (AI) comes in.

On an increasingly complex future grid, the number of decisions will far exceed human and conventional digital automation capabilities. Theres already automation on todays grid, but automation can only go so far. Fully enabling a future grid and maximising its benefits will require AI. Ultimately, AI will transform the grid from an aging supplier of commodity electricity to an intelligent system of systems that produces optimised outcomes.

There are three main sectors where AI will drive decarbonisation the most electricity, buildings and transportation.

Leveraging years or decades worth of data, AI will generate forecasts for key factors including weather, renewable energy generation, customer demand and market prices. These forecasts, and learning from predicted vs. actual outcomes, will enable AI to optimise every resource on the grid for every moment of the day. And its real-time control capabilities will execute on forecasts and correct for anomalies, ultimately down to the sub-second level.

More importantly, the role of buildings on a decarbonised grid will change: instead of a passive, predictable consumer of electricity, buildings will become an integrated, dynamic resource and active market participant. Just as important as the selling of clean, locally generated electricity into markets will be the selling of grid services, with buildings flexible loads helping to maintain a balanced, reliable grid. AI-enabled buildings will allow users to match consumption with on-site and off-site renewable generation to achieve 24/7 clean energy objectives.

Storage will be as important as renewables and AI in achieving global decarbonisation, solving the challenge of intermittent renewable generation so that clean energy is available when its needed. Storage will enable buildings and transportation to act as fully flexible grid resources, making up for shortfalls in on-site generation and providing grid services when devices cant.

Building a massive grid that instantaneously balances supply and demand while providing power has been called the greatest engineering feat of the 20th century. Powering a fully decarbonised economy with AI-driven renewables and energy storage may prove to be the greatest achievement of the 21st.

Todays markets bear very little resemblance to those that will underpin a decarbonised grid. The range and value of AI-enabled energy services havent been contemplated in many jurisdictions, let alone the means of incorporating and compensating them in real time. Electricity markets must transform completely.

Every barrier that prevents a customer from buying or selling the clean energy services they want, and that the grid needs, at any time, must be removed. In its place must be efficient, transparent market mechanisms which AI will animate, allowing customers and utilities to realise their desired outcomes with or without human involvement.

Its an annual meeting featuring top examples of public-private cooperation and Fourth Industrial Revolution technologies being used to develop the sustainable development agenda.

It runs alongside the United Nations General Assembly, which this year features a one-day climate summit. This is timely given rising public fears and citizen action over weather conditions, pollution, ocean health and dwindling wildlife. It also reflects the understanding of the growing business case for action.

The UNs Strategic Development Goals and the Paris Agreement provide the architecture for resolving many of these challenges. But to achieve this, we need to change the patterns of production, operation and consumption.

The World Economic Forums work is key, with the summit offering the opportunity to debate, discuss and engage on these issues at a global policy level.

Since policy drives markets, policymakers must instigate needed changes over the next decade to enable full electric sector decarbonisation by 2035, a pillar of many long-term emissions reduction strategies.

AI technology itself must continue to evolve. But the biggest barrier isnt technical its regulatory. Action towards mid-century decarbonisation must occur. The costs and risks of inaction increase every moment and stand between us and the much-needed decarbonised grid of the future.

The views expressed in this article are those of the author alone and not the World Economic Forum.

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AI is transforming the grid. Here's how. - World Economic Forum

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