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Incentive based emergency demand response effectively reduces peak load during heatwave without harm to vulnerable groups

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How can electricity conservation measures impact vulnerable groups?

New research analyzes the incentive-based emergency demand response measure, finding no additional burdens for vulnerable groups

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Yueming 'Lucy' Qiu, CGS Senior Fellow and SPP Associate Dean of Research and Faculty Affairs

Wang, Z., Lu, B., Wang, B., Qiu, Y., Shi, H., Zhang, B., Li, J., Li, H., & Zhao, Z. Incentive based emergency demand response effectively reduces peak load during heatwave without harm to vulnerable groups. Nat Commun 14, 6202 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-41970-8

Abstract: The incentive-based emergency demand response measure serves as an important regulatory tool during energy system operations. However, whether people will sacrifice comfort to respond to it during heatwave and what the effect on heat-vulnerable populations will be are still unclear. A large-scale emergency demand response pilot involving 205,129 households was conducted in southwestern China during continuous extreme high temperatures in summer. We found that the incentive-based emergency demand response causes a statistically significant decline in electricity use with no additional financial burden on vulnerable groups. The electricity conservation potential of urban households was higher than that of rural households. Households with children did not respond to the emergency demand response, while the response of households with elderly individuals proved to be more positive. The repeated and frequent implementation of this policy did not result in an attenuation of the regulatory effect. This research can serve as a reference for countries with similar regulated power markets.


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