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security through collective response to oil supply disruptions and authoritative research and analysis on energy for its 28 member countries Today our overall efforts can be summarised by:
Energy Security, Environmental protection, Economic growth and Engagement worldwide
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OECD/IEA 2011
An energy revolution is needed to achieve our energy security and climate goals
Gt CO2 60 55 50 45 40 Nuclear 6% Power generation efficiency and fuel switching 5% End-use fuel switching 15% End-use fuel and electricity efficiency 38% BLUE Map emissions 14 Gt WEO 2009 450 ppm case 2015 2020 2025 2030 ETP2010 analysis 2035 2040 2045 2050 Baseline emissions 57 Gt CCS 19% Renewables 17%
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A wide range of technologies will be necessary to reduce energy-related CO2 emissions substantially.
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Smart grid technologies are applied across the entire electricity system 6
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OECD/IEA 2011
incorporating business models addressing cost, security and sustainability. Develop global technology standards to optimise and accelerate development and deployment while reducing costs Integrate with existing and new electricity infrastructure considerations needed
advantage of new technology - leadership given by governments and private sector Address system-wide and cross-sector barriers to enable practical sharing of smart grids costs and benefits. Address cyber security issues proactively through both regulation and application of best practice. Develop smart customers through codifying best practice, demonstrate and deploy engaging pricing policies and usage tools, protection systems and approaches for data treatment and implement social safety nets
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International Collaboration
Expand smart grid collaboration; particularly related to standards and sharing
demonstration findings in technology, policy, regulation and business model development. Link with electricity system technology areas that are not exclusively focused on smart grids. Expand capacity-building efforts in rapidly developing countries tailored to contexts such as rural electrification, island systems and alternative billing approaches.
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emerging economies could leap-frog directly to smart grid infrastructure Targeted analysis and roadmaps created collaboratively with developed and developing countries are required to determine specific needs and solutions in technology and regulation.
Developing and emerging economies can use smart grids to build from household electrification to community and regional systems
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discussion and analysis National Smart Grid roadmapping How-to-guide Strong working support with the International Smart Grid Action Network (ISGAN) Electricity Storage Roadmap 18
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Thank you
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