Feasibility study: investigation of car park-based V2G services in the UK central hub

The increasing uptake of electric vehicles, and the established practice of long-term parking at stations and airports, offers an opportunity to develop a flexible approach to help with the energy storage dilemma. This paper investigates the feasibility of using a number of EV batteries as an energy...

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Main Authors: D. Strickland, T. Embley, J. Osborne, J. Yang, Z. Qiao, A. Malhotra, A. Corliss, K. Ashworth
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2019-04-01
Series:The Journal of Engineering
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digital-library.theiet.org/content/journals/10.1049/joe.2018.8230
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spelling doaj-85bd08335ad94f658c01887b84f1ffd92021-04-02T06:49:07ZengWileyThe Journal of Engineering2051-33052019-04-0110.1049/joe.2018.8230JOE.2018.8230Feasibility study: investigation of car park-based V2G services in the UK central hubD. Strickland0T. Embley1J. Osborne2J. Yang3Z. Qiao4A. Malhotra5A. Corliss6K. Ashworth7Loughbourough UniversityCostainCostainAston UniversityAston UniversityLoughbourough UniversityEncraftEncraftThe increasing uptake of electric vehicles, and the established practice of long-term parking at stations and airports, offers an opportunity to develop a flexible approach to help with the energy storage dilemma. This paper investigates the feasibility of using a number of EV batteries as an energy storage and grid balancing solution within the UK Central Hub area. Here, the capital cost of the vehicle is a sunk cost to the EV owner. The potential income generated, or discount on long-term parking, is an additional benefit of ownership. This paper considers the income available to a small and large size car park from the different market mechanisms to offer grid support in the UK and contrasts this with the complexity and costs of the EV charging infrastructure required within these types of scheme.https://digital-library.theiet.org/content/journals/10.1049/joe.2018.8230battery powered vehiclesenergy storagevehicle-to-gridpower generation economicselectric vehicle chargingcar park-based V2G serviceselectric vehiclesairportsenergy storage dilemmaEV batteriesgrid balancing solutionUK Central Hub areacapital costsunk costpotential incomeEV charging infrastructurelong-term parking stationsmarket mechanisms
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author D. Strickland
T. Embley
J. Osborne
J. Yang
Z. Qiao
A. Malhotra
A. Corliss
K. Ashworth
spellingShingle D. Strickland
T. Embley
J. Osborne
J. Yang
Z. Qiao
A. Malhotra
A. Corliss
K. Ashworth
Feasibility study: investigation of car park-based V2G services in the UK central hub
The Journal of Engineering
battery powered vehicles
energy storage
vehicle-to-grid
power generation economics
electric vehicle charging
car park-based V2G services
electric vehicles
airports
energy storage dilemma
EV batteries
grid balancing solution
UK Central Hub area
capital cost
sunk cost
potential income
EV charging infrastructure
long-term parking stations
market mechanisms
author_facet D. Strickland
T. Embley
J. Osborne
J. Yang
Z. Qiao
A. Malhotra
A. Corliss
K. Ashworth
author_sort D. Strickland
title Feasibility study: investigation of car park-based V2G services in the UK central hub
title_short Feasibility study: investigation of car park-based V2G services in the UK central hub
title_full Feasibility study: investigation of car park-based V2G services in the UK central hub
title_fullStr Feasibility study: investigation of car park-based V2G services in the UK central hub
title_full_unstemmed Feasibility study: investigation of car park-based V2G services in the UK central hub
title_sort feasibility study: investigation of car park-based v2g services in the uk central hub
publisher Wiley
series The Journal of Engineering
issn 2051-3305
publishDate 2019-04-01
description The increasing uptake of electric vehicles, and the established practice of long-term parking at stations and airports, offers an opportunity to develop a flexible approach to help with the energy storage dilemma. This paper investigates the feasibility of using a number of EV batteries as an energy storage and grid balancing solution within the UK Central Hub area. Here, the capital cost of the vehicle is a sunk cost to the EV owner. The potential income generated, or discount on long-term parking, is an additional benefit of ownership. This paper considers the income available to a small and large size car park from the different market mechanisms to offer grid support in the UK and contrasts this with the complexity and costs of the EV charging infrastructure required within these types of scheme.
topic battery powered vehicles
energy storage
vehicle-to-grid
power generation economics
electric vehicle charging
car park-based V2G services
electric vehicles
airports
energy storage dilemma
EV batteries
grid balancing solution
UK Central Hub area
capital cost
sunk cost
potential income
EV charging infrastructure
long-term parking stations
market mechanisms
url https://digital-library.theiet.org/content/journals/10.1049/joe.2018.8230
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