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That our campus areas develop and provide higher education institutions with the right conditions over time is crucial for us as a company. The key to success is to find close and good forms of collaboration with our customers where we can translate visions into concrete development and action plans.

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Our knowledge environments are dynamic places where the core focuse is on education and research, but also on entrepreneurship and innovation. We have modern labs and offices for rent at several of our campuses.

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Campus development

That our campus areas develop and provide higher education institutions with the right conditions over time is crucial for us as a company. The key to success is to find close and good forms of collaboration with our customers where we can translate visions into concrete development and action plans.

Read more

Vacant premises

Our knowledge environments are dynamic places where the core focuse is on education and research, but also on entrepreneurship and innovation. We have modern labs and offices for rent at several of our campuses.

Read more

Svenska
Customer service

Cooperation · Onsdag 20 december, 2023

EU projects on campus have created the conditions for a more flexible electricity market

Now it is the end of the EU project Flexigrid, in which Akademiska Hus, together with Göteborg Energi, Chalmers University of Technology and a number of other European universities, has collaborated on issues concerning the energy system of the future. The aim has been to test new ways to make the electricity systems more flexible, and there are many lessons learned.

At the beginning of next year, the FlexiGrid project, which started in 2020 and was funded through the EU's Horizon 2020 programme, will end. In the project, new methods have been tested with the aim of adapting and regulating the energy system at Chalmers campus Johanneberg based on Gothenburg's electricity grid needs. Existing infrastructure on campus, such as batteries, heat pumps and solar cells, has been integrated into a modern control system to regulate and adapt use based on power needs, electricity consumption and market data. The control system uses artificial intelligence and has been designed to regulate power loads and optimize energy systems. The goal has been a flexible electricity grid where consumption and production are synchronized in order to be able to cut power peaks and regulate power shortages in society.

The lessons learned have been many and valuable, not least in the context of the transition to more fossil-free energy production. The electrification that is taking place in society also affects the need for a functioning electricity supply, in Gothenburg alone, the power demand is estimated to increase by at least 75 percent in less than ten years.

Unique collaboration with campus as a test bed

In this project, but also thanks to several previous projects, a fine collaboration has developed between the researchers at Chalmers and Akademiska Hus. This has created the conditions for using the entire campus as a test bed.

"Our collaboration with Akademiska Hus is unique. We have been involved in the entire chain of this project, from the development and modelling of new solutions to being able to test on existing infrastructure on campus. My hope is that we will be able to scale our learnings to more campuses around Sweden," says David Steen, researcher in electrical engineering at Chalmers.

In parallel with the project, a completely new marketplace for power flexibility has also been created in Gothenburg. The marketplace is run by Göteborg Energi and thanks to the project, Akademiska Hus was able to become one of their first customers to offer flexibility back to the market. In concrete terms, power trading means that customers temporarily reduce their electricity use or increase their production of electricity to reduce the load on the electricity grid.

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