U.S. DOE’s Future Connected Communities: Validating Buildings as a Grid Resource

U.S. Department of Energy's Building Technologies Office is expanding its research to validate grid-interactive efficient buildings as a grid resource. (April 2020)

FAQ

Date: April 2020

Discover how the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)'s Building Technologies Office is expanding its research to validate grid-interactive efficient buildings as a grid resource. Gain insights regarding key findings on grid-interactive efficient buildings research and future opportunities.

The dialogue focuses on a significant investment planned by DOE in Connected Communities. As used here, the term Connected Community is a group of grid-interactive efficient buildings with diverse, flexible end-use equipment that collectively work to maximize building and grid efficiency without compromising occupant needs and comfort. The goal of a proposed Funding Opportunity Announcement is to demonstrate the ability of groups of efficient buildings to provide additive benefits to the electricity system and building owners including energy savings, peak demand reduction, reduced capacity needs, and cost savings. DOE intends to expand its initial set of smart community testbeds into a larger cohort of regional pilot projects to study a variety of building types, technologies, and business models in varied utility regulatory environments, climates, and locations.

Read the DOE Funding Opportunity Announcement at click here and plan to join PLMA for a dialogue with these industry thought leaders.

Speakers:
David Nemtzow, U.S. Department of Energy
Mary Ann Piette, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Teja Kuruganti, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Allison Hamilton, National Rural Electric Cooperative Association