The project is part of a project implemented this year by the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry of Japan (METI), which aims to test VPP that uses consumer energy resources.
Kyocera has announced that it has registered with the sustainable and open innovation initiative (SII) as a resource aggregator for new projects that help control the energy resources of Japanese consumers.
Kyocera will focus on using home battery storage technology to remotely manage energy supply and demand in the new phase of virtual power plant (VPP) testing.
The project is part of a project implemented this year by the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry of Japan (METI), which aims to test VPP that uses consumer energy resources.
Since the Great East Japan Earthquake in March 2011, the development of stable supply of renewable energy and the improvement of energy efficiency have received wide attention.
Therefore, a VPP with the ability to remotely control and integrate distributed power resources (including batteries, newer batteries and renewable power generation facilities) is in high demand.
By using a highly accurate energy management system (EMS), VPP is expected to serve as a source of regulation and supply of energy.
The goal of the project participants is to establish a system that optimizes energy supply and demand through remote management.
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