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3 WELCOME TO THE EEM19 THE 16TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON THE EUROPEAN ENERGY MARKETS

Assoc. Prof. Andrej F. Gubina, Ph.D. Conference Chair

Dear Colleagues,

Welcome! It is our pleasure to invite the Karst and built upon the Ljubljan- you to the 16th European Energy Mar- ica River, Ljubljana (“the city of love” in ket Conference (EEM’19) hosted by the Slovenian) is at the same time a jewel Faculty of Electrical Engineering at the of Vienna Secession architecture that University of Ljubljana, from 18. to 20 won the European Green Capital Award September 2019. for 2016 for its environmental achieve- ments. The medieval Ljubljana Castle Ljubljana is the capital and the largest rules quietly over the bustling historic city in , serving as the cultural, old town and fin-de-siècle Plečnik - ar educational, economic, political, and chitecture, inviting our visitors to im- administrative centre of independent merse themselves in Ljubljana’s lively Slovenia since 1991. Built upon the social and cultural life. ancient Roman city Emona and first mentioned in the 12th century, Ljublja- The EEM conference has a long tradi- na was the historic capital of , tion, bringing together international inspiring the dreams and uniting the experts, scientists and representatives throughout the centuries in from industry and politics from dif- the Habsburg Monarchy and Yugo- ferent fields to exchange views, expe- slavia. Situated between the and rience and discuss issues related to

4 energy markets. Topics including ener- all the participants to learn, cooperate gy markets, smart grids, decarbonisa- and enjoy together this journey into tion and sustainable energy combine the exciting world of energy markets. with the aspects of market design, pol- During the conference, we will keep icymaking, and regulatory frameworks you well-grounded and fully powered! design. EEM serves as a platform where the scientific ideas exchanged and dis- Dobrodošli na EEM19 v Ljubljani! cussed provide a firm base for the pol- Welcome to the EEM19 in Ljubljana! icymakers to tackle the contemporary challenges in the energy sector. Assoc. Prof. Dr Andrej F. Gubina

In Ljubljana, you are in for a treat of Slovenian hospitality. While building on the trademark keynote speeches and other time-honoured traditions of EEM that make this conference stand out, our team will work hard to provide you with a stimulating and engaging programme that will allow

5 KEYNOTE SPEAKERS PLENARY SESSIONS

Wednesday, 18. 09. 2019 / 09:00 / P1 CONFERENCE OPENING AND WELCOME ADDRESS – OPENING PLENARY SESSION Assoc. Prof. Andrej F. Gubina, Ph.D., Conference Chair Prof. Dr. Igor Papič, University of Ljubljana, Rector Prof. Dr. Gregor Dolinar, Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Dean Mr. Tomi Medved, Conference Vice-chair

Wednesday, 18. 09. 2019 / 11:00-12:30 / P1 “COMMUNITY BUILDING UNDER SHARING ECONOMY PARADIGM”

ROK VODNIK Petrol, Member of the Management Board

“Making the Energy Transition Happen – Smart Technologies and New Business Models”

His career started with Avtotehna-Canon. management board. He was appointed He then joined the Kolektor Group, Member of the Management Board where he headed various projects of Petrol on 30th August 2009. At its involving IT, internationalisation and 26th meeting held on 27th January analyses. In 1999 he went to the USA to 2016, the Supervisory Board of Petrol head the establishment of Comtrade d.d., Ljubljana appointed Mr. Vodnik USA, a trade company, and TKI Inc., Member of the Management Board a production company. In 2002 Mr. for a five-year term commencing on Vodnik assumed the duties of executive 1st February 2016. His areas of expertise director responsible for the commercial and responsibility include sales, trading, area in the Kolektor Group d.o.o., energy & environment. where he was also a member of the

6 SAŠA DJOKIĆ School of Engineering, The University of Edinburgh, Reader

“Community Energy Projects: Scottish/UK Experiences and Perspectives”

Dr. Sasa Djokic received Dipl.-Ing. and IEEE Best Paper and Best Poster M. Sc. degrees in Electrical Engineering awards. Over the past 25 years, Dr. from the University of Nis, Serbia, and Djokic has performed researches in Ph. D. degree in the same area from the areas of theoretical electromag- the University of Manchester Institute netics, illuminating engineering, sev- of Science and Technology (UMIST), eral aspects of power quality analysis, Manchester, United Kingdom. He is load and microgeneration modelling, currently a Reader in Electrical Power assessment of solar and off-shore/on- Systems at the University of Edinburgh, shore wind energy resources and, most Scotland, United Kingdom, where he is recently, system reliability and security teaching undergraduate and gradu- analysis. ate (master and doctoral level) classes on Fundamentals of Electrical Engi- Dr. Djokic is a recognized expert by neering, Electrical Power Systems En- IEC and has contributed to the several gineering, Power Systems, Electrical national and international standards, Machines, Power Systems Economics, technical reports and engineering rec- Network Integration of Renewable ommendations. He continues to be ac- Generation and Power Quality. tive in several ongoing CIGRE/CIRED, IEEE, IESNA, IEC/CISPR and other inter- Dr. Djokic has published around 250 national Working Groups, Task Forces papers, of which several have received and Committees.

7 STANISLAS D’ HERBEMONT REScoop.eu, Project Manager

“Energy Communities, a new market actor?”

Mr. d’Herbemont holds two master’s and citizens participation. He joined degree from the Technical University REScoop.eu in 2016 as a project man- of Mainz and the Ecole Supérieur du ager for the REScoop PLUS project. He Commerce Extérieur (International is also involved in the COMPILE project Management, Audit & Finance). for the association.

Before joining REScoop.eu, he served Finally, he has been supporting the as coordinator of the Tournesol Micro- team of other H2020 projects such as Grids association that worked on the WiseGRID and FLEXcoop. problematics of grid decentralization

8 Thursday, 19. 09. 2019 / 11:00 - 12:30 / P1 “NEW MARKET DEVELOPMENTS: ENERGY, CO2 AND SERVICES”

MATTEO BALLARIN Europe Energy Group, CEO

“Becoming a smart European multi-utility company”

Matteo Ballarin was born in 1973. He strategy, business process design and graduated in electrical engineering at operational planning in energy trad- University of Padua in 1999. ing and delivery, wholesale and markets, electric utility Mr. Ballarin is active in the electricity operations and regulation, developing market since 1999. He worked in several project. Today Eu- companies collaborating in the growth rope Energy Group can deliver power and consolidation of major players not only in every country in Europe but like Multiutility Spa, Meta SpA (now also from UK to Ukraine, from Spain to merged into Hera SpA) and Energetic Turkey and Georgia and work on all the Source Spa. main Gas Hub of the continent.

In 2007 Mr. Ballarin and two other In 2012, through a management buy- shareholders founded Europe Energy out, he bought the 90% of the compa- Spa, a new company specialized in en- ny and started to create the Europe En- ergy trading, scheduling and risk man- ergy Group. Since February 2018 he is a agement. Europe Energy also provides 100% Owner of Europe Energy Holding. consulting to help clients with business

9 BOŠTJAN BANDELJ Belektron, Director

“Carbon Market Developments: Are EU ETS and MSR working?”

After receiving University degrees in trading company with its main focus Electrical Engineering and Finance on carbon emission allowances. Boštjan joined a Central European electricity utility where he helped in During past years Mr. Bandelj led setting up a European power trading Belektron and developed it into one of desk. After serving as Head of Market the largest independent global carbon Analysis Division responsible for Portfo- trading firms with above 300 million lio and Risk Management and obtain- tons of carbon allowances traded year- ing Master of Science degree in Electri- ly and a world-wide business partners cal Engineering, Boštjan left in 2008 to and trading counterparty base. establish Belektron, a well-established

10 PIETRO RABASSI Nord Pool, Director for Central European Markets

“Energy and power markets of today and of tomorrow”

Pietro is the Director for Central Euro- relevant to the energy and power trad- pean Markets and responsible for ex- ing environment and to his role at Nord panding Nord Pool’s business across Pool. Europe and creating greater value for its customers. He joined the company He has studied management engi- in 2016. neering and economics at Politecnico di Milano in and at Ecole Polytech- Nord Pool’s Central European markets nique in and pursued postgrad- currently cover the following countries: uate business and government studies , Belgium, France, Germany, at Harvard University in the USA, where Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Poland. he worked amongst others with Prof. Nord Pool has been present in Germa- William Hogan. ny since 2006, in the Intraday market and other services around the trading. More information about his back- It is now offering the intraday markets ground can be found here: www.linke- in all Central European markets and is din.com/in/pietro-grigorio-rabassi. going soon to offer the rest of the spot Pietro has lived in 7 countries so far. power market offering there. You may address him in Norwegian in the longer run, but for now it is easi- Pietro has a professional background er to choose among English, German, in international business, and the pub- French, Italian or Greek (you can try lic and academic sectors, particularly some Spanish and Russian, too).

11 Friday, 20. 9. 2019 / 11:00-12:30 / P1 “ENERGY POLICY AND REGULATION DESIGN IN EUROPE”

VALERIJA KOROŠEC Independent Researcher

“Universal-Trade-Democratic (UTD) concept in domain of energy poverty”

Mrs Valerija Korošec, Ph.D., has been invited to present her work at differ- employed at the Institute of Macro- ent meetings and workshops in Slo- economic Analysis and Development venia or to international organizations. (IMAD) of the Slovenian Government She presented this three-dimension- since 2001. She is engaged in analyzing al system at the conference “Slovenia the European social policy and data on 2030” – Change for an efficient social poverty, inequality, material depriva- state, organised by Borut Pahor, Pres- tion, social exclusion and gender equal- ident of the RS, in 2015 (“Slovenia 2030” ity, as well as Sustainable Development – Change for efficient social state- or Goals and different synthetic develop- ganized by the president of RS, Borut ment indicators, such as the Human Pahor in 2015). She presented the ME- Development Index, Social Progress FISTO, EUROMOD microsimulation of Index, Prosperity index, etc. this approach in the field of child bene- fits, at the Universal Child Grant confer- Besides working for IMAD, she is an ence in Geneva organised by UNICEF independent researcher of a new, and ILO in 2019. zaUTD social policy approach, which integrates the unconditional uniform Mrs Valerija KOROŠEC holds a PhD in universal system with the ‘Trade’ and Postmodern Sociology from the Uni- ‘Democratic’ system and so upgrades versity of Maribor, MSc in European the concept of social market system. Social Policy (MESPA program orga- Upon this conceptual approach she nized by the EU and the University of has built some political pragmatic pro- Ljubljana) and a degree in Moral Edu- posals. In 2010 she published an algo- cation, Faculty of Education, Univer- rithm for a budget neutral introduction sity of Maribor. She is a representative of basic income in Slovenia and start- of Slovenia in the Basic Income Earth ed to develop the idea of universal job Network (BIEN) and the European Net- guarantee coupled with the idea of work for the Fair Sharing of Working shorter working week. She is regularly Time.

12 DENNIS HESSELING ACER – Agency for the Cooperation of Energy Regulators, Head of Gas Department

“European gas market: developments and needs”

Mr. Dennis Hesseling joined the EU from 2002 on, mainly on gas issues. Agency for the Cooperation of Energy From 2000 he worked as a manage- Regulators ACER as Head of the Gas ment consultant for McKinsey & Com- Department in December 2012. He is pany in Brussels, providing strategic responsible for the Agency’s gas activ- and operational advice to postal com- ities regarding network codes, infra- panies and banks. structure and market monitoring. He is also the Agency’s representative to the Mr. Hesseling holds a PhD in Mathe- Energy Community Regulatory Board. matics from Utrecht University, Neth- Before joining ACER, Mr. Hesseling erlands. He received additional training worked as Head of Unit in the Compe- at McKinsey business school IMD (Lau- tition Department of the Netherland sanne) and the Dutch programme for Competition Authority NMa (ACM), re- prospective top civil servants. Mr. Hes- sponsible for merger control and an- seling trained energy regulators and titrust enforcement in the Dutch en- competition authorities in Romania, ergy, telecommunications and media Bulgaria, Ukraine, Turkey and Vietnam sectors. Prior to that, he worked in the and political parties in various African NMa’s Energy Regulation department countries.

13 JANEZ KOPAČ Energy Community Secretariat, Director

“Two prices of burning on a single energy market”

Mr. Janez Kopač has been Director of Before this Mr. Kopač served as Slove- the Energy Community Secretariat nia’s director general for energy at the since December 2012. Ministry of Economy, as minister of the environment, spatial planning and en- The Energy Community is an inter- ergy, and as minister of finance, in ad- national organization that brings to- dition to having been a member of the gether the EU and its neighbours to for ten years. create an integrated pan-European energy market organized according to Mr. Kopač holds a master’s in economic the EU’s internal energy market rules science from the University of Ljubljana. and principles.

14 Plenary sessions moderator

Ms. Alenka Lenka Klopčič, Energetika.NET (Director & Editor)

Alenka Lena Klopčič (former Žumbar) tion, Entrepreneurship, and Education has a bachelors degree in Economy Fellowship Program, which gave her an and masters degree in Business and insight into Chicago’s energy business. she has also finished postgraduate In autumn 2016 she completed HBX studies at the Faculty of State and Eu- Disruptive Strategy, Harvard Business ropean Studies. She joined the editorial School’s online course. board of Energetika.NET as a journalist in mid 2004 and became editor in mid Alenka has played an active role in the 2007. In 2010, when Energetika.NET development of Energetika.NET from changed its status from a business unit an online newspaper to a leading me- to an independent company, Alenka dia and publishing company in the took over as director. field of energy in Slovenia and South East Europe. Alenka enjoys travelling, She is interested in the traditional recreation, and books. She is also an energy sector as well as new energy author and publisher (www.energeti- technologies and the development of ka.net/en-zalozba/eko-knjiga). She also the regional SEE market. In May 2009, started the Blue World for Youth orga- Alenka received an award for excel- nization, which offers direct assistance lence in reporting on the energy sector; to young people in developing their the award is granted by the Slovenian career. Her latest charity project was National CIGRÉ-CIRED Committee. In the launch of The Happy House, an ini- June 2013, she successfully completed tiative in her local community helping the Investigative Reporting Certificate children from economically disadvan- Program at the New England Center taged and foster families to improve for Investigative Reporting at Boston their social position (www.srecnahisa. University, and in May 2015, she com- si/en). pleted WorldChicago’s Tech Innova-

15 COMMITTEES

Chair

Assoc. Prof. Andrej F. Gubina, University of Ljubljana

International Steering Committee

Julián Barquín (Endesa, Spain) Ronnie Belmans (K.U. Leuven, Belgium) Marko Delimar (University of Zagreb, ) Jean-Michel Glachant (FSR and Loyola Chair, Italy) Andrej F. Gubina (University of Ljubljana, Slovenia) Mohammad Reza Hesamzadeh (KTH, Sweden) Władysław Mielczarski (TU Lodz, Poland) Dominik Möst (TU Dresden, Germany) João Tomé Saraiva (University of Porto, Portugal) Jorge Sousa (ISEL & INESC-ID, Portugal) Michał Wierzbowski (TU Lodz, Poland)

Local Organizing Committee

Tomi Medved, Vice-chair Edin Lakić, Technical chair Jernej Zupančič, Image and marketing Jan Jeriha, Secretary Benjamin Komel, IT Marjana Harej, Public Relations

16 REVIEWERS

We would like to disclose our sincere gratitude to all our scientific reviewers and thank them for their valuable contribution. They ensured the 16th International Conference on the European Energy Market has preserved the quality and success.

Scientific Committee

Mihai Calin (AIT Austrian Institute of Technology GmbH, Austria) Erik Delarue (KU Leuven, Belgium) Samson Hadush (Vlerick Business School, Belgium) Selma Hanjalic (University of Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina) Pablo Cuervo Franco (University of Brasilia/Campus Universitário, Asa Norte, Faculdade de Tecnologia – FT, Brazil) Andre Teixeira (University of Amazonas State, Brazil) Goran Knezevic (Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Computer Science and Information Technology, University of Osijek, Croatia) Zvonimir Klaic (Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Computer Science and Information Technology, University of Osijek, Croatia) Danijel Topic (Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Computer Science and Information Technology, University of Osijek, Croatia) Marko Delimar (Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Computing, University of Zagreb, Croatia) Igor Kuzle (Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Computing, University of Zagreb, Croatia) Hrvoje Pandzic (Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Computing, University of Zagreb, Croatia) Damir Jakus (Fakultet elektrotehnike, strojarstva i brodogradnje, Split, Croatia) Jacques Percebois (University de Montpellier, France) Yannick Perez (CentraleSupélec and Université Paris-Sud, France) Yannick Phulpin (EDF, France) Hannelle Holtinten (VTT Technical Research Center, Finland) Jonas Egerer (TU Berlin, Germany) Philipp Hauser (TU Dresden, Germany) Dogan Keles (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany) Cristoph Mayer (OFFIS e.V. – Institut für Informatik, Germany) Felix Müsgens (BTU Cottbus, Germany) Anne Neumann (Universität Potsdam, Germany) Mathias Uslar (OFFIS e.V., Germany)

17 Christoph Brunner (EnBW Energie Baden-Württemberg AG, Germany) Pantelis Capros (National Technical University of Athens, Greece) Marta Chinnici (ENEA – Italian National Agency for Energy, Italy) Giorgio Graditi (ENEA – Italian National Agency for Energy, Italy) Luigi Grossi (University of Verona, Italy) Arturo Lorenzoni (University of Padova, Italy) Gianluigi Migliavacca (RSE S.p.A., Italy) Fany Nan (University of Verona, Italy) Alessandro Sapio (Parthenope University of Naples, Italy) Federico Silvestro (University of Genova, Italy) Alessandro Zani (RSE S.p.A., Italy) Anna Mutule (Institute of Physical Energetics, Latvia) Artjoms Obushevs (Institute of Physical Energetics (IPE), Latvia) Irina Oleinikova (Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), Norway) Machiel Mulder (University of Groningen, the Netherlands) Ivan Diaz-Rainey (University of Otago, New Zealand) Nils-Henrik von der Fehr (University of Oslo, Norway) Tomasz Siewierski (Lodz University of Technology, Poland) João Catalão (Faculty of Engineering of the University of Porto (FEUP), Portugal) Jose Nuno Fidalgo (FEUP/DEEC & INESC TEC, Portugal) Fernando Maciel Barbosa (FEUP and INESC TEC, Portugal) Joao Lagarto (Lisbon Engineering Superior Institute (ISEL), Portugal) Pedro Faria (GECAD – Polytechnic of Porto, Portugal) João Saraiva (INESC, Portugal) Julia Seixas (Nova University of Lisbon, Portugal) Jorge Sousa (ISEL & INESC-ID, Portugal) Zita Vale (ISEP; Polytechnic of Porto, Portugal) Jose Villar (INES TEC, Portugal) Zeljko Djurisic (University of Belgrade, School of Electrical Engineering, Serbia) Predrag Stefanov (University of Belgrade, School of Electrical Engineering, Serbia) Vladimir Katic (University of Novi Sad, Serbia) Gasper Artac (Petrol d.d., Slovenia) Borut Kozan (Petrol d.d., Slovenia) Marko Čepin (University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Slovenia) Carlos Madina (Tecnalia Research & Innovation, Spain) Gustavo A. Marrero (Unversidad de La Laguna, Spain) Juan Ignacio Perez Diaz (Technical University of Madrid, Spain) Francisco Ramos-Real (Universidad de La Laguna, Spain) Julio Usaola (Universidad Carlos III de Madrid, Spain) Chloé Le Coq (Stockholm School of Economics (SSE), Sweden) Ndaona Chokani (ETH Zürich, Switzerland) Sasa Djokic (School of Engineering, The University of Edinburgh, UK)

18 PROGRAMME OVERVIEW

WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY 18.09.2019 19.09.2019 20.09.2019

Registration 08:30 – 09:30 Main hall 09:00 – 10:30 *Welcome session Paper sessions *09:30 – 10:30 P1 P1, P2, P3, P4, P5, P6 10:30 – 11:00 Coffee break Main hall Keynote sessions Community New market Energy Policy building under developments: and Regulation 11:00 – 12:30 sharing economy energy, CO2 design in paradigm and services Europe P1

12:30 – 14:00 Lunch Main hall Special sessions - H2020 EU projects 14:00 – 15:30 P1, P2, P3 15:00 – 17:00 *Technical tour Technical tour *15:30 – 17:00 Energetika RCERO Ljubljana Ljubljana 15:30 – 16:00 Coffee break Main hall 16:00 – 17:30 Paper sessions P1, P2, P3, P4, P5, P6 Closing 17:30 – 18:00 ceremony P1 18:00 – 20:00 *City tour Closing event, *18:00 – 19:00 Prešeren’s square, Barbeque party Ljubljana Main hall Welcome reception, Gala dinner, Cocktail event Best paper award 19:00 – 23:00 Cankarjev dom Club, Intercontinental Ljubljana Hotel Ljubljana

19 SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME PAPER SESSIONS

Wednesday, 18.09.2019

PS 11: SYSTEM OPERATION, MODELLING, BALANCING AND AS

Time: Wednesday, 18.09.2019, 16:00 Location: P1 Session Chair: Prof. Dominik Möst, TU Dresden

1. Maximizing distribution network hosting capacity through optimal network reconfiguration Damir Jakus, Rade Čađenović, Josip Vasilj, Petar Sarajčev / University of Split, Croatia

2. Impact of Distributed Generation Penetration on Distribution Network Technical Losses Pedro Henrique M. Nascimento1, Othon Ferreira Ávila1, Luiz Eduardo Oliveira23, João Alberto Passos Filho1, João Tomé Saraiva2, 3, Ivo Chaves da Silva Junior1 / 1Dep. of Energy of Federal University of Juiz de Fora; 2Faculty of Engineering of the University of Porto; 3INESC TEC

3. Modeling of Stand-alone Power Supply System with Distributed Generation Sources Andrey Shalukho, Elena Sosnina, Evgeny Kryukov, Natalya Erdili, Anton Ivanov / Nizhny Novgorod State Technical University n.a. R.E. Alekseev, Russian Federation

4. Transmission Expansion Planning - A broad comparison between static and dynamic approaches Luiz Eduardo Oliveira1,2, Phillipe Vilaça Gomes1, João Paulo Tomé Saraiva1,2 / 1INESC TEC; 2Faculty of Engineering of the University of Porto, Portugal

5. Bayesian Inference with MILP Dispatch Models for the Probabilistic Prediction of Power Plant Dispatch Mario Beykirch, Tim Janke, Florian Steinke / Technische Universität Darmstadt, Germany

6. Grid Expansion Costs Considering Different Price Control Strategies of Power-to-X Options Based on Dynamic Tariffs at the Low-Voltage Level Michael Haendel, Judith Stute / Fraunhofer ISI, Germany

20 PS 12: DEMAND RESPONSE

Time: Wednesday, 18.09.2019, 16:00 Location: P2 Session Chair: Prof. Irina Oleinikova, NTNU

1. Impact of the ‘Transfer of Energy’ Regulation on Industrial Flexibility Valorisation Jens Baetens, Jeroen D. M. De Kooning, Greet Van Eetvelde, Lieven Vandevelde / Electrical Energy Laboratory (EELAB), Department of Electrical Energy, Metals, Mechanical Constructions & Systems (EEMMeCS), Ghent University, Belgium

2. Consumer Access to Electricity Markets: the Demand Response Baseline Ariana Isabel Ramos Gutierrez / Vlerick Business School, Belgium

3. Battery Electric Buses Participation in Electricity Markets and Power Systems Nick Chapman1, Mattia Barbero1, Cristina Corchero1,2 / 1Catalonia Institute for Energy Research (IREC), Spain; 2Universitat Politecnica de Catalunya (UPC), Spain

4. Sub-aggregator as a Key Enabler in Harnessing Demand Response Potential of Electric Vehicles Matti Elias Aro1, Kari Mäki1, Pertti Järventausta2, Harri Vesa3 / 1VTT TECHNICAL RESEARCH CENTRE OF FINLAND LTD, Finland; 2Tampere University; 3e2m Voimakauppa Oy

5. mpact of the Demand Side Management in the Planning and Operations Towards 2050 Ruth Domínguez, Miguel Carrión / University of Castilla - La Mancha, Spain

6. Technical Backbone for the Democratization of Flexibility: Standards- based Demand Response Infrastructure Hrvoje Keko1, Hrvoje Keserica1, Stjepan Sučić1, Vlladimiro Miranda2 / 1KONČAR - Power Plant and Electric Traction Engineering, Croatia; 2INESC TEC – INESC Technology and Science Porto, Portugal

7. Flexibility Assessment Through Local Energy Consumer Irina Oleinikova1, Anna Mutule2 / 1Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU); 2Institute of Physical Energetics (IPE)

21 PS 13: ENERGY MARKETS

Time: Wednesday, 18.09.2019, 16:00 Location: P3 Session Chair: Prof. Andrej Ferdo Gubina, University of Ljubljana

1. Impact of a yearly reference period on the sliding feed-in premium for onshore wind in Germany Vasilios Anatolitis, Marian Klobasa / Fraunhofer ISI, Karlsruhe, Germany

2. European Natural Gas Infrastructure in the Energy Transition Peter Kotek2, Pedro Crespo del Granado1, Ruud Egging1, Borbala Toth2 / 1NTNU, Norway 2REKK,

3. Impact of Nord Stream 2 on Gas Flows in Europe Maik Günther1, Volker Nissen2 / 1Stadtwerke München GmbH; 2TU Ilmenau, Department of Service Information Systems Engineering

4. A co-simulation of flexibility market-based congestion management in Northern Germany Anna Christin Meißner1, Hojat Zarif2, Lucas Jürgens2, Martin Grasenack2, Alexander Dreher3, Kaspar Knorr3, Mike Vogt3 / 1Fraunhofer Institute for Silicon Technology, Germany; 2Hamburg University of Applied Sciences; 3Fraunhofer Institute for Energy Economics and Energy System Technology

5. The Impact of EV Charging Schemes on the Nordic Energy System Philipp Andreas Gunkel, Felipe Junqueira Fausto, Klaus Skytte, Claire Bergaentzlé / Technical University of Denmark, Denmark

6. Analysis of the German Continuous Intraday Market and the Revenue Potential for Flexibility Options Julian Rominger1, Manuel Lösch1, Sebastian Steuer1, Katrin Köper2, Hartmut Schmeck1,3 / 1FZI Research Center for Information Technology, Haid-und-Neu- Str. 10-14, 76131 Karlsruhe, Germany; 2E.ON Inhouse Consulting GmbH, Brüsseler Platz 1, 45131 Essen, Germany; 3Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Institute of Applied Informatics and Formal Description Methods, Kaiserstr. 89, 76133 Karlsruhe, Germany

7. Increasing the flexibility of European type electricity auctions via a novel bid class Dávid Csercsik1, Ádám Sleisz2, Péter Márk Sőrés2 / 1Pázmány Péter Catholic University, Hungary; 2Budapest University of Technology and Economics Department of Power Engineering

22 PS 14: ENERGY EFFICIENCY

Time: Wednesday, 18.09.2019, 16:00 Location: P4 Session Chair: Dr. James Carroll, Trinity College Dublin

1. The Impact of Climate Change Information on Household Flight Choice: Preliminary Results James Carroll1, William Brazil1,2, Michael Howard1, Eleanor Denny1 / 1Trinity College Dublin, Ireland; 2The Economic and Social Research Institute

2. The Impact of Energy Cost Forecasts on the Energy Efficiency Premium in Property Sales: Results from a National RCT with daft.ie James Carroll, Ronan Lyons, Eleanor Denny / Trinity College Dublin, Ireland

3. Impacts of apartment building energy renovation policies on Finnish combined heat and power production Kristo Helin1, Janne Hirvonen1, Juhani Heljo2, Sanna Syri1 / 1Aalto University, Finland; 2Tampere University, Finland

4. Improving the operation regimes of cogeneration/trigeneration systems after the implementation of energy efficiency measures or renewable energy-based solutions Liviu Ruieneanu, Mihai Paul Mircea / University of Craiova, Romania

5. Model predictive control considering forecast deviation in local districts Alexander Arnoldt, Peter Bretschneider / Fraunhofer IOSB, Germany

6. Decision on energy efficiency from the perspective of the managers: its barriers Helder Marques1, Marlene Amorim1,2, Marta Ferreira Dias1,2,3 / 1Company; 2Research Unit on Governance, Competitiveness and Public Policies, DEGEIT, Universidade de Aveiro; 3University of Aveiro, Portugal

7. Introducing System Utilization Index for Energy Efficiency Evaluation and Labelling Edin Lakic1, Chloe Fournely2, Andrej F. Gubina1, Saša Djokic3 / 1University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Slovenia; 2Polytech Clermont- Ferrand, Université Clermont Auvergne, France; 3School of Engineering, The University of Edinburgh, UK

23 PS 15: BALANCING MARKETS

Time: Wednesday, 18.09.2019, 16:00 Location: P5 Session Chair: Prof. Suad Smail Halilčević, University of Tuzla

1. Innovative solutions for integrating the energy balancing market (mFRR) Jan Jeriha, Edin Lakić, Andrej Gubina / University of Ljubljana, Slovenia

2. On the Impact of Voluntary Bids in Balancing Reserve Markets Emil Kraft, Fabian Ocker, Dogan Keles, Wolf Fichtner / Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany

3. Market response for real-time energy balancing – Evidence from three countries Felix Röben1, J.E.S. de Haan2 / 1HAW Hamburg, Germany; 2TenneT TSO GmbH

4. Developing an economically advantageous wind forecasting method for electricity market design with a 15-minute imbalance settlement period Liga Kurevska1, Tija Sile2, Antans Sauhats1 / 1Riga Technical University, Latvia; 2University of Latvia, Department of Physics, Latvia

5. Secondary & Tertiary Balancing Power Generations Integration Feasibility Analysis Based on AGC30 Model with PV Penetration Bo Jie1, Takao Tsuji1, Kenko Uchida2 / 1Yokohama National University, Japan; 2Waseda University, Japan

6. Assessment of balancing market designs in the context of European coordination Agustín Motte Cortés, Manuel Eising / EIfER Europäisches Institut für Energieforschung EDF-KIT EWIV, Germany

7. Benefits of regional balancing areas Aigars Sīlis, Kalvis Ertmanis, Līga Sadoviča, Gatis Junghans, Antans Sauhats / Riga Technical University, Latvia

24 PS 16: INNOVATIVE APPROACHES IN ENERGY MARKETS

Time: Wednesday, 18.09.2019, 16:00 Location: P6 Session Chair: Prof. Margarita Matias Robaina, University of Aveiro

1. Determinants of Energy Intensity in Portugal - Decomposition and BVAR approaches Margarita Robaina1, Mara Madaleno1, Marta Neves2 / 1GOVCOPP, DEGEIT, University of Aveiro, Portugal; 2DEGEIT, University of Aveiro, Portugal

2. Long-term flexibility analysis of the power sector in South East Europe László Szabó, András Mezősi, László Paizs / Corvinus University of Budapest, Hungary

3. Blockchain application in renewable energy microgrids: an overview of existing technology towards creating climate resilient and energy independent communities Erica Svetec1, Lucija Nađ2, Robert Pašičko1, Boris Pavlin2 / 1Faculty of Geotehnical Engineering, University of Zagreb, Croatia; 2Zelena energetska zadruga, Croatia

4. Exploring the potential of blockchain as an enabler for three types of energy communities Kirsi Kotilainen, Jussi Valta, Kari Systä, Saku J. Mäkinen, Pertti Järventausta, Tomas Björkqvist / Tampere University, Finland

5. A Tool for Economic Potential Estimation of Hydrokinetic Technology Anna Mutule1, Diana Zalostiba1, Ansis Kalnacs2 / 1Riga Technical University, Latvia; 2Institute of Physical Energetics, Latvia

6. Artificial neural networks modeling photovoltaic power system allocation – Can artificial intelligence beat a fundamental approach? Lara Lück, Albert Moser / IAEW, RWTH Aachen, Germany

7. Business models for Peer-to-Peer Energy Markets Rogério Rocha, José Villar, Ricardo J. Bessa / INESC TEC (Institute for Systems and Computer Engineering, Technology and Science), Portugal

25 Thursday, 19.09.2019

PS 21: SYSTEM OPERATION, MODELLING, BALANCING AND AS

Time: Thursday, 19.09.2019, 09:00 Location: P1 Session Chair: Prof. Damir Jakus, University of Split

1. Flexible capacity addition case study at reduced grid tariff without security of supply Vincent Layec, Holger Wache FHNW, Switzerland

2. Flexibility in the context of a cellular system model Nico Lehmann1, Julian Huber1,2, Andreas Kießling3 / 1Karlsruhe Institute of Technology; 2Forschungszentrum Informatik, Germany; 3energy design & management consulting

3. Simulation of Transmission Grid Operation Incorporating Flexibility at Distribution Level Andre Hoffrichter, Thomas Offergeld, Andreas Blank, Tom Kulms / RWTH Aachen University, Germany

4. Extracting physical power plant parameters from historical behaviour David Kraljic, Miha Troha, Blaz Sobocan / COMCOM d.o.o. IDRIJA, Slovenia

5. A Minute-to-Minute Unit Commitment Model to Analyze Generators Performance Rodrigo Villanueva, Pedro Crespo del Granado, Irina Oleinikova, Hossein Farahmand / Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway

6. Integrating Demand Response in Regional Electricity Markets: An agent- based simulation Christoph Randecker, Matthias Kuehnbach, Marian Klobasa / Fraunhofer Institute for Systems and Innovation Research ISI, Germany

7. Novel hybrid attribute selection approach for marginal capacity prices forecast on European Primary Control Reserve Market Atom Mirakyan1, Achim Schreider2, Michael Stephan3 / 1TRACTEBEL engie, Germany; 2TRACTEBEL engie, Germany; 3TRACTEBEL engie, Germany

26 PS 22: ENERGY PRICES & FORECASTING

Time: Thursday, 19.09.2019, 09:00 Location: P2 Session Chair: Prof. Mohammad Reza Hesamzadeh, KTH Royal Institute of Technology

1. Agent-Based Generation and Storage Expansion Planning in Interconnected Electricity Markets Christoph Fraunholz, Dogan Keles, Wolf Fichtner / Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany

2. A review of single artificial neural network for electricity spot price forecasting Fan Zhang, Hasan Fleyeh / Dalarna university, Sweden

3. Improved Hourly Price Forward Curve Forecasting Based on Future Prices for Hydropower Production Adrian Ettlin / University of Basel, Switzerland

4. Which strategy for implementing cost-benefit analysis of system infrastructures and market design in the European power systems? André Nekrasov1, Jasmina Pierre2 / 1EDF R&D, France; 2EDF, France

5. Optimal Day-Ahead Bidding of a Risk-Averse Pulp and Paper Mill in the Energy and Reserve Market Lars Herre, Federica Tomasini, Kaveh Paridari / KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden

6. Price elasticity of electricity demand in metropolitan areas – Case of Oslo Matthias Hofmann1,2, Karen Byskov Lindberg2,3 / 1Statnett, Norway; 2NTNU, Norway; 3SINTEF, Norway

7. ELM-Fuzzy Method for Automated Decision-Making in Price Directed Electricity Markets Miltiadis Alamaniotis / University of Texas at San Antonio, of America

27 PS 23: ELECTRICITY MARKETS

Time: Thursday, 19.09.2019, 09:00 Location: P3 Session Chair: Dr. Laila Zemite, Riga Technical University

1. The future of cross-border participation in capacity mechanisms in EU law Kaisa Huhta / University of Eastern Finland, Finland

2. Modeling the Serial Structure of the Hawkes Process Parameters for Market Order Arrivals on the German Intraday Power Market Alexander Blasberg, Nikolaus Graf von Luckner, Rüdiger Kiesel / University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany

3. Operational use of marginal cost curves for a hydropower producer trading in the intraday market Ane Fløyen Dideriksen1, Susanne Sekkesæter1, Stein-Erik Fleten1, Ellen Krohn Aasgård2, Hans Ivar Skjelbred2 / 1Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway; 2SINTEF Energi, Norway

4. A Limit Order Book based Unit Commitment of a Renewable Energy Unit Portfolio in the Continuous Intraday Market Alexander Dreher, Sven Liebehentze, Manuel Wickert, Jonathan Schuett / Fraunhofer Institute for Energy Economics an Energy System Technology, Germany

5. Network model for investigation of electricity market problems Bence Sütő1, Péter Márk Sőrés1, Dániel Divényi1, László Szabó2, András Mezősi2, Alfa Diallo2, Bálint Géher2 / 1Budapest University of Technology and Economics, Hungary; 2Corvinus University of Budapest, Regional Centre for Energy Policy Research

6. Impact of Emissions Trading System on the operation of electricity supply industry Dawid Chudy, Władysław Mielczarski / Lodz University of Technology, Poland

7. Congestion Management in European Transmission Grids – A Comparative Assessment of Different Concepts Marius Siemonsmeier, Jens Sprey, Nadine Palmowski, Albert Moser / Institute of Power Systems & Power Economics, RWTH Aachen University, Germany

28 PS 24: INNOVATIVE APPROACHES IN ENERGY MARKETS

Time: Thursday, 19.09.2019, 09:00 Location: P4 Session Chair: Dr. Ruth Domínguez, University of Castilla - La Mancha

1. Fast freqeuncy response from an UPS system of a data center, background and pilot results Ilari Johannes Alaperä1, Janne Paananen2, Kari Dalen3, Knut Hornnes3, Samuli Honkapuro4 / 1Fortum Power and Heat Oy, Finland; 2Eaton Power Quality Oy, Finland; 3Statnett SF, Norway; 4Lappeenranta University of Technology, Finland

2. Impact of Spot Market Interfaces on Local Energy Market Trading Carlo Schmitt1, Wilhelm Cramer1, Maria Vasconcelos2, Nicolas Thie2 / 1Fraunhofer FIT, Germany; 2Institute for High Voltage Technology, RWTH Aachen University

3. Optimised TSO-DSO Coordination to integrate renewables in flexibility markets Inés Gómez1, Carlos Madina1, Sandra Riaño1, Marco Rossi2, Hamid Aghaie3 / 1Tecnalia, Spain; 2RSE, Italy; 3AIT, Austria

4. A Local Electricity Market Model for DSO Flexibility Trading Ricardo Faia1, Tiago Pinto1, Zita Vale2, Juan Manuel Corchado3 / 1GECAD research group, Polytechnic of Porto, Portugal; 2Polytechnic of Porto, Portugal; 3University of Salamanca, Spain

5. Markets for Direct Current Distribution Systems: Towards Energy-based vs Flex-based Designs Longjian Piao1,2, Laurens de Vries1, Mathijs de Weerdt2, Neil Yorke-Smith2,3 / 1Energy & Industry Group, Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands; 2Algorithmics Group, Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands; 3Olayan School of Business, American University of Beirut, Lebanon

6. Model for estimation of the potential flexibility of objects Kujtim Dauti, Gašper Artač / Petrol d.d., Slovenia

7. New approach to constraints removal using Power Flow Tracing method Aleksandra Baczyńska / Lodz University of Technology, Poland

29 PS 25: ENERGY COMMUNITIES

Time: Thursday, 19.09.2019, 09:00 Location: P5 Session Chair: Prof. Margarita Matias Robaina, University of Aveiro

1. Overview of emerging regulatory frameworks on collective self- consumption and energy communities in Europe Dorian Frieden1, Andreas Tuerk1, Josh Roberts2, Stanislas D’Herbemont2, Benjamin Komel3, Andrej F. Gubina3 / 1Joanneum Research, Graz, Austria; 2University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Slovenia; 3RESCOOP, Brussels, Belgium

2. Optimized energy generation for rural areas Bjoern Illing, Liane Rulack / Fraunhofer IOSB-AST, Germany

3. Renewable energy cooperatives: a systematic review Susana Soeiro1, Marta Ferreira Dias2 / 1University of Aveiro, Portugal; 2GOVCOPP, DEGEIT, UNiveristy of Aveiro

4. Preferable and Feasible Electricity Corporate Community Concept for Three Generation types in Metropolitan Area in Finland. Rebecka Rikkas / Aalto University, Finland

5. Vote for your Energy: A market mechanism for local energy markets based on the consumers’ preferences Bent Richter, Esther Mengelkamp, Christof Weinhardt / Karlsruher Institut of Technology, Germany

6. Energy Community Luče Borut Jereb, Gašper Artač / Petrol d.d., Slovenia

7. Residential DER Cooperative Investments María Almansa1, Alberto Campos1, José Villar2, Salvador Doménech1 / 1Comillas Pontifical University, Spain;2 INESC TEC - Institute for Systems and Computer Engineering, Technology and Science, Porto, Portugal

30 PS 26: ENERGY STORAGE

Time: Thursday, 19.09.2019, 09:00 Location: P6 Session Chair: Prof. Jorge Mendes Sousa, ISEL

1. The Impact of Weather and of Batteries on the Investment Risk for Backup Technologies in a Largely Renewable Energy System Sabine Pelka1, Laurens de Vries2, Marc Deissenroth3 / 1Fraunhofer Institute for Systems and Innovation Research ISI, Germany; 2Delft University of Technology, Netherlands; 3German Aerospace Center, Germany

2. Impact of E-Mobility Penetration on Community Electricity Storage Andreas Stroink, Tim Wawer / Hochschule Osnabrück University of Applied Sciences, Germany

3. Operating a Battery in a Hydropower-Dominated System to Balance Net Load Deviations Christian Øyn Naversen1, Sigurd Bjarghov1, Arild Helseth2 / 1NTNU, Norway; 2SINTEF Energy Research, Norway

4. Stationary batteries in the EU countries, Norway and Switzerland: Market shares and system benefits in a decentralized world Anna-Lena Klingler1, Steffi Schreiber2, Atse Louwen3 / 1Fraunhofer Institute for Industrial Engineering IAO, Germany; 2Chair of Energy Economics, TU Dresden; 3Copernicus Institute of Sustainable Development

5. Optimizing prosumers battery energy storage management using machine learning Nico Voigt, Tim Wawer, Till Albert / University of Applied Science Osnabrueck, Germany

6. Thermal energy storage for CHP in power market conditions Jevgenijs Kozadajevs, Aleksandrs Dolgicers, Dmitrijs Boreiko, Ivars Zalitis, Antanas Sauhats / Riga Tecnical University, Latvia

7. SimSES Multi-Use: A simulation tool for multiple storage system applications Stefan Englberger1, Holger Hesse1, Nina Hanselmann2, Andreas Jossen1 / 1Technical University of Munich, Germany; 2Smart Power GmbH, Dornacher Str. 3, 85622 Feldkirchen, Germany

31 PS 31: SYSTEM OPERATION, MODELLING, BALANCING AND AS

Time: Thursday, 19.09.2019, 16:00 Location: P1 Session Chair: Prof. Wladyslaw Mielczarski, Lodz University of Technology

1. Distributionally Robust Distributed Generation Expansion Planning in a Market Environment Xuejiao Han, Gabriela Hug / ETH Zurich, Switzerland

2. Heuristics for Transmission Expansion Planning in Low-Carbon Energy System Models Fabian Neumann, Tom Brown / Institute for Automation and Applied Informatics, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany

3. Monthly Contract Decomposition in Hydropower-dominated Electricity Market: Balancing Generation Fairness and Load Following Xuguang Yu1,2,4, Zebin Jia1,2,4, Yapeng Li2,3,4, Zhipeng Zhao1,2,4, Chuntian Cheng1,2,4, Gang Li1,2,4 / 1Dalian University of Technology, China, People’s Republic of; 2Institute of Hydropower and Hydroinformatics, Dalian University of Technology, Dalian, China; 3Faculty of Electronic Information and Electrical Engineering, Dalian University of Technology, Dalian, China; 4Key Laboratory of Ocean Energy Utilization and Energy Conservation of Ministry of Education, Dalian, China

4. Generation Expansion Planning Based on Positive Net Present Value Salvador Doménech Martínez1, Fco. Alberto Campos Fernández1, José Villar Collado2 / 1Universidad Pontificia Comillas, Spain;2 INESC TEC

5. Evolution of the pan-European transmission system towards the development of a prospective global power grid Angelo L’Abbate1, Gianluca Fulli2, Roberto Calisti1, Philip Minnebo3, Arturs Purvins3, Hana Gerbelova3, Mircea Ardelean3, Alessandro Zani2 / 1RSE SpA, Milan, Italy; 2EC JRC-Dir. C.3, Ispra, Italy; 3EC JRC-Dir. C.3, Petten, The Netherlands

6. Impact of nuclear supply outage on the European electricity system Alessandro Zani1, Marta Poncela Blanco1, Arturs Purvins1, Angelo L’Abbate2 / 1JRC, Italy; 2RSE, Italy

7. Switching from green certificates to feed-in-tariff subsidies Dawid Chudy, Władysław Mielczarski / Lodz University of Technology, Poland

32 PS 32: ENERGY PRICES & FORECASTING

Time: Thursday, 19.09.2019, 16:00 Location: P2 Session Chair: Prof. Dominik Möst, TU Dresden

1. Electricity Prices and Value of Flexible Generation in Northern Europe in 2030 Linn Emelie Schäffer, Birger Mo, Ingeborg Graabak / SINTEF Energi AS, Norway

2. Probabilistic Forecasting of Imbalance Prices in the Belgian Context Jonathan Dumas, Ioannis Boukas, Miguel Manuel De Villena, Sébastien Mathieu, Bertrand Cornélusse / Liege university, Belgium

3. Rolling Horizon Simulator for Evaluation of Bidding Strategies for Reservoir Hydro Hans Ole Riddervold1, Ellen Krohn Aasgård2, Hans Ivar Skjelbred2, Christian Øyn Naversen1, Magnus Korpås1 / 1NTNU (Norwegian University of Science and Technology), Norway; 2SINTEF Energy Research

4. Electricity market price analysis using time series clustering Ana Alexandra Martins1, João Hermínio Lagarto1,2, Margarida G. M. S. Cardoso3,4 / 1ISEL, Lisboa, Portugal; 2INESC-ID, Lisboa, Portugal; 3Instituto Universitário de Lisboa (ISCTE-IUL), Lisboa, Portugal; 4Business Research Unit (BRU-IUL), Lisboa, Portugal

5. Assessing the Accuracy of Different Machine Learning Classification Algorithms in Forecasting Results of Italian Ancillary Services Market / Filippo Bovera, Alessandro Blaco, Giuliano Rancilio, Maurizio Delfanti Politecnico di Milano, Italy

6. Modelling of Hourly Wind Generation using Pan-European Climatic Data Base and Weibull Probability Distribution Angel Nikolov Georgiev, Stefan Ivanov Sulakov / Elektroenergien sistemen operator EAD, Bulgaria

7. Regional Short-Term System Adequacy Forecasting Using Analytical Probabilistic Approach Angel Nikolov Georgiev, Nikolay Marinov Chavdarov, Stefan Ivanov Sulakov / Elektroenergien sistemen operator EAD, Bulgaria

33 PS 33: ELECTRICITY MARKETS

Time: Thursday, 19.09.2019, 16:00 Location: P3 Session Chair: Prof. Jorge Mendes Sousa, ISEL

1. The Management System of the Polish Electricity Exchange from the Viewpoint of the Control and Systems Theory Jerzy Rudolf Tchórzewski / Siedlce University of Natural Sciences and Humanities, Poland

2. Indicators to measure intraday electricity market efficiency in 18 selected Member States of the Jan Frederick George, Barbara Breitschopf, Jenny Winkler / Fraunhofer Institute, Germany

3. Determination of preloading of transmission lines for Flow-Based Market Coupling Lothar Wyrwoll, Andreas Blank, Christoph Müller, Ralf Puffer / RWTH Aachen University, Germany

4. Strategic Trade of Multi-Energy Aggregators with Local Multi-Energy Systems while Participating in Energy and Reserve Markets Nilufar Neyestani, Antonio Coelho, Filipe Soares / INESC TEC, Portugal

5. Model-based assessment of removing distortions in the European electricity in view of the EU 2030 targets Maria Kannavou, Pantelis Capros / E3MLab, National Technical University of Athens, Greece

6. An analysis of the recent price evolution of the Slovenian Day-Ahead electricity market Gregor Ožbolt, Anže Predovnik / BSP Energy Exchange LL C, Slovenia

7. Techno-Economic Assessment of Energy Management Strategies for a Renewable Portfolio with Storage Systems in Energy and Frequency Reserve Markets Amaia González-Garrido1,2, Haizea Gaztañaga1, Andoni Saez-de-Ibarra1, Aitor Milo1, Pablo Eguia2 / 1IKERLAN Technology Research Center, Spain; 2University of the Basque Country

34 PS 34: INNOVATIVE APPROACHES IN ENERGY MARKETS

Time: Thursday, 19.09.2019, 16:00 Location: P4 Session Chair: Prof. Anke Weidlich, University of Freiburg

1. Innovative Market Schemes for Integrated Multi-energy Systems Kris Kessels1,2, Shahab Shariat Torbaghan1,2, Ana Virag1,2, Mehdi Madani3, Peter Sels3, Hélène Le Cadre1,2, Guillaume Leclercq3 / 1VITO, Belgium; 2EnergyVille, Belgium; 3N-SIDE, Belgium

2. On the equal substitution of MILP unit commitment subproblems with dynamic programming Henrik Schwaeppe, Moritz Nobis, Christoph Müller / Institute for High Voltage Technology at RWTH Aachen University, Germany

3. and Interconnections for Flexibility: A Comparative Analysis Claire Bergaentzlé1, Jon Gustav Kirkerud2, Klaus Skytte1, Ole Jess Olsen1 / 1DTU, Denmark; 2NMBU, Norway

4. Research on Applications of Distributed Ledger Technologies in the Balancing Market Michelle Steiner1, Markus Küch2, Jonas Kampik1, Simon Hintzen3 / 1P3 Energy & Storage GmbH, Am Kraftversorgungsturm 3, Aachen, Germany; 2Institute of Energy Systems, Energy Efficiency and Energy Economics, TU Dortmund University, Emil-Figge-Straße 70, Dortmund, Germany; 3WSW Netz GmbH, Schützenstraße 34, Wuppertal, Germany

5. Business model readiness of start-up driven energy innovations – an empirical review Kirsi Kotilainen1, Ulla A. Saari1, Jussi Valta1, Saku J. Mäkinen1, Sinan Kufeouglu2 / 1Tampere University, Finland; 2University of Cambridge, United Kingdom

6. Comparing Load Flow Decompositon Methods for Cost Sharing of Coordinated European Redispatch Michal Klos, Karol Wawrzyniak / Interdisciplinary Division for Energy Analyses, NCBJ, Poland

7. A Review of the Main Machine Learning Methods for Predicting Residential Energy Consumption Alfonso González-Briones / University of Salamanca, Spain

35 PS 35: ENERGY POLICY

Time: Thursday, 19.09.2019, 16:00 Location: P5 Session Chair: Jan Jeriha, University of Ljubljana

1. Impact of Climate Changes on the Portuguese Energy Generation Mix J. Nuno Fidalgo1,2, Débora de São José2, Carlos Silva2 / 1INESC TEC; 2Faculdade de Engenharia do Porto

2. End-users aggregation: a review of key elements for future applications Fabio Bignucolo, Arturo Lorenzoni, Jan Marc Schwidtal / University of Padua, Italy

3. Institutional Complexity and Organisational Characteristics in the Emerging Sector of Local Energy Systems - Case Study Jussi Valta, Kirsi Kotilainen, Pertti Järventausta, Saku J. Mäkinen / Tampere University, Finland

4. The economics of possible CO2 utilization pathways in a highly decarbonized European energy system Benjamin Lux, Stefan Poslowsky, Benjamin Pfluger / Fraunhofer Institute for Systems and Innovation Research ISI, Germany

5. Regional coordination in grid expansion with offshore wind: the case of the Baltic Sea Region Athanasios Papakonstantinou, Claire Bergaentzle, Lise-Lotte Pade / Technical University of Denmark, Denmark

6. Integrated Grid and Power Market Simulation: Investigating the Required Modeling Level of Detail Maximilian Borning / Institute of Power Systems and Power Economics, RWTH Aachen University, Germany

36 PS 36: RENEWABLE ENERGY SOURCES

Time: Thursday, 19.09.2019, 16:00 Location: P6 Session Chair: Dr. Danijel Topić, University of Osijek, Faculty of Electrical Engineering

1. Investigation on the Relation between the Level of Wind and PV Generation and the Contracted and Mobilized FRR and RR Reserves in Portugal Gonçalo Cruz Barrias1, Joao Tomé Saraiva1,2 / 1FEUP/DEEC; 2INESC TEC, Portugal

2. Market-based optimization model of combined heat and power operation Gregor Gostinčar, Gašper Artač / Petrol d.d., Slovenia

3. Profitability Analysis of Spanish CCGTs under Future Scenarios of high RES and EV Penetration Francisco Martínez2, Fco. Alberto Campos2, Salvador Domenech2, José Villar1 / 1INESC TEC (Institute for Systems and Computer Engineering, Technology and Science), Portugal; 2Instituto de Investigación Tecnológica IIT, ICAI, Universidad Pontificia Comillas, Madrid, Spain

4. A first analysis of the photovoltaic auction program in Germany Taimyra Batz Liñeiro, Felix Müsgens / BTU Cottbus-Senftenberg, Germany

5. Regionalized Potential Assessment of Variable Renewable Energy Sources in Europe Michael Ebner, Claudia Fiedler, Fabian Jetter, Tobias Schmid / FfE e.V., Germany

6. Optimization of the off-grid systems based on renewable energy for power supply in rural areas Rebeka Raff2, Velimir Golub4, Danijel Topić1, Goran Knežević1, Jurica Perko3 / 1University of Osijek, Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Computer Science and Information Technology, Croatia; 2Public Institute County Development Agency; 3Regional Energy Agency North; 4Vodovod-Osijek d.o.o.

7. Energy Source Selection for the Combined Renewable Power Plants Andrey Shalukho, Elena Sosnina Nizhny Novgorod / State Technical University n.a. R.E. Alekseev, Russian Federation

37 Friday, 20.09.2019

PS 41: SYSTEM OPERATION, MODELLING, BALANCING AND AS

Time: Friday, 20.09.2019, 09:00 Location: P1 Session Chair: Prof. Sanna Syri, Aalto University

1. Coordination of Interaction between Consumers and Load Serving Entity for Demand-side Management Natalia Aizenberg / Melentiev Energy Systems Institute Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Russian Federation

2. Information Exchange Platform for Enabling Ancillary Services from Distributed Energy Resources Anna Kulmala1, Ville Tikka2, Sami Repo3, Antti Keski-Koukkari1, Aleksei Romanenko2, Peyman Jafary3, Aleksei Mashlakov2, Samuli Honkapuro2, Pertti Järventausta3, Jarmo Partanen2, Kari Mäki1 / 1VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland, Finland; 2LUT University, Finland; 3Tampere University, Finland

3. First attempt to modelling of long-term transmission expansion planning with consideration of HVDC point to point connections Waldemar Niewiadomski / Lodz University of Technology, Poland

4. Modeling TSO-DSO coordination: The value of distributed flexible resources to the power system Hanne Høie Grøttum, Siri Førsund Bjerland, Pedro Crespo del Granado, Ruud Egging / Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway

5. Interaction of DSO and local energy systems through network tariffs Magnus Askeland1,2, Magnus Korpås2 / 1Energy Systems, SINTEF Energy Research, Trondheim, Norway; 2Department of Electric Power Engineering, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim, Norway

6. Business models for community microgrids Evgenia Vanadzina1, Goncalo Mendes1, Samuli Honkapuro1, Antti Pinomaa1, Helina Melkas2 / 1Electricity Market and Power Systems, LUT University, Lappeenranta, Finland; 2Industrial Engineering and Management, LUT University, Lahti, Finland

38 PS 42: ENERGY PRICES & FORECASTING

Time: Friday, 20.09.2019, 09:00 Location: P2 Session Chair: Dr. Hasan Fleyeh, Dalarna University

1. Short term electricity spot price forecasting using CatBoost and bidirectional long short term memory neural network Fan Zhang, Hasan Fleyeh / dalarna university, Sweden

2. Simulation of day-ahead electricity market prices using a statistically calibrated structural model Valentin Mahler1,2, Robin Girard1, Sébastien Billeau1,2, Georges Kariniotakis1 / 1Mines ParisTech, PSL University, PERSEE - Centre for Processes, Renewable Energies and Energy Systems, France; 2ADEME - Agence de l’environnement et de la maîtrise de l’énergie, France

3. Shadow Price Formulation and Decomposition for Economic Emission Dispatch Qiwei Zhang, Yunwei Shen, Fangxing Li / The University of Tennessee, United States of America

4. Distributed learning of energy contracts negotiation strategies with collaborative reinforcement learning Tiago Pinto, Zita Vale / Polytechnic of Porto, Portugal

5. A Comparative Study of Energy Models for Turkish Electricity Market Using LEAP and OSeMOSYS Daniel Julius Massaga, Gökhan Kirkil, Emre Çelebi / Kadir Has University, Turkey

6. Scheduling of an Energy Storage System Operation with Regard to the Market Price Behavior Nelli Nigmatulina, Ville Tikka, Nadezda Belonogova, Aleksei Romanenko, Samuli Honkapuro / LUT university, Finland

39 PS 43: ELECTRICITY MARKETS

Time: Friday, 20.09.2019, 09:00 Location: P3 Session Chair: Dr. Daniel Divényi, Budapest University of Technology and Economics

1. Decision support system for a portfolio of a hydroelectric company in the Brazilian market Eduardo Silva Raguenet, Oumar Diene / UFRJ, Brazil

2. Principal Cross-Border Flow Patterns in the European Electricity Markets Mirko Schäfer1, Fabian Hofmann2, Hazem Abdel-Khalek1, Anke Weidlich1 / 1INATECH, University of Freiburg, Germany; 2Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies, Germany

3. Multi-objective Optimization Model for Cascaded Operation under Multivariate Electricity Market of South-western China Yu Haojianxiong, Shen Jianjian, Chen Chuntian, Zhao Zhipeng, Lu Jia / Institute of Hydropower & Hydroinformatics,Key Laboratory of Ocean Energy Utilization and Energy Conservation of Ministry of Education,Dalian University of Technology, China;

4. Market Power Analysis for the Turkish Electricity Market Nuri Şensoy / Energy Exchange Istanbul, Turkey

5. The Value of Lost Load (VoLL) in European Electricity Markets: Uses, Methodologies, Future Directions Gregory Peter Swinand, Ashwini Natraj / London Economics, Ireland

6. Balancing power potential of pools of small-scale units Jonas Hülsmann, Christopher Ripp, Florian Steinke / Technische Universität Darmstadt, Germany

7. Improving the flexibility of intraday markets by introducing special products Dániel Divényi, Beáta Polgári, Peter M Sőrés, Bálint Hartmann, István Vokony / Budapest University of Technology and Economics, Hungary

40 PS 44: ENERGY POLICY

Time: Friday, 20.09.2019, 09:00 Location: P4 Session Chair: Prof. Marta Ferreira Dias, University of Aveiro

1. Sectorial and Regional Impacts of the European Carbon Market in Portugal: Second Phase Margarita Matias Robaina1,2, Marisa Gonçalves2 / 1Research Unit on Governance, Competition and Public Policies (GOVCOPP); 2DEGEIT, University of Aveiro, Portugal

2. Price and Employment Effects triggered by a German Coal Phase-Out – A Discourse Analysis Daniel Scholz1, Stefan Zundel2, Felix Müsgens1 / 1Chair of Energy Economics, Brandenburg University of Technology Cottbus-Senftenberg, Cottbus, Germany; 2Chair of Macroeconomics with a focus on Energy and Environmental Economics, Brandenburg University of Technology Cottbus-Senftenberg, Senftenberg, Germany

3. Integrated renewable energy systems for Germany – A model-based exploration of the decision space Lukas Nacken1,2, Friedrich Krebs1,2, Timo Fischer2, Clemens Hoffmann1,2 / 1Department Integrated Energy Systems, University of Kassel; 2Fraunhofer Institute for Energy Economics and Energy System Technology

4. Energy Literacy: knowledge, affect, and behavior of university members in Portugal Ana Martins1, Mara Madaleno2, Marta Ferreira Dias2 / 1University of Aveiro, DEGEIT, Portugal; 2GOVCOPP, DEGEIT, UNiversity of Aveiro

5. Development of Energy Security in Finland and in the Baltic States since 1991 Jaakko Jääskeläinen, Sanna Syri, Jaana Lager / Aalto University, Finland

6. Market architecture for TSO-DSO interaction in the context of European regulation Andrei Z. Morch / SINTEF Energy Research, Norway

7. Designing Taxes and Tariffs for Electricity Systems with Complex Flexible Actors Felipe Junqueira Fausto, Philipp Andreas Gunkel, Klaus Skytte, Claire Bergaentzlé, Russell McKenna / Technical University of Denmark, Denmark

41 PS 45: DEMAND RESPONSE

Time: Friday, 20.09.2019, 09:00 Location: P5 Session Chair: Dr. Abinet Tesfaye Eseye, Aalto University

1. An MILP model for the optimal energy management of a smart household Nikolaos E. Koltsaklis, Ioannis P. Panapakidis, Georgios C. Christoforidis, Constantinos E. Parisses / Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Western Macedonia, 50100 Kozani, Greece

2. How Building and District Algorithms Enhance Renewable Energy Integration in Energy Markets Lluc Canals Casals1, Cristina Corchero1, Joana Ortiz1, Jaume Salom1, David Cardoner1, Lucía Igualada1, Rafael Carrillo2, Yves Stauffer2 / 1IREC, Spain; 2CSEM, Switzerland

3. Impact of Demand Response on the Risk Profile of Electricity Retailers in North-European Electricity Market Antti Rautiainen1, Pertti Järventausta1, Heikki Rantamäki2, Veli-Matti Laakkonen2, Heidi Uimonen3 / 1Tampere University, Finland; 2Pohjois-Karjalan Sähkö Inc., Finland; 3Fingrid Inc., Finland

4. Can DERs fully participate in emerging local flexibility tenders? Felipe Gonzalez-Venegas1,2, Marc Petit1, Yannick Perez3 / 1GeePs, CentraleSupélec, France; 2Groupe PSA, France; 3Laboratoire Génie Industriel, CentraleSupélec, France

5. Simulation-supported quantification of flexibility: assessing the potential for blocks of buildings to participate in demand response markets Xiubei Ge1, Enrique Kremers1, Malcolm Yadack2, Ursula Eicker2 / 1European Institute for Energy Research, Germany; 2Stuttgart Technology University of Applied Science, Germany

6. Exploiting Flexibility of Renewable Energy Integrated Buildings for Optimal Day-ahead and Real-time Power Bidding Considering Batteries and EVs as Demand Response Resources Abinet Tesfaye Eseye, Matti Lehtonen, Toni Tukia, Semen Uimonen, Robert John Millar / Aalto University, Finland

42 PS 46: ENERGY STORAGE

Time: Friday, 20.09.2019, 09:00 Location: P6 Session Chair: Prof. Mohammad Reza Hesamzadeh, KTH Royal Institute of Technology

1. Avoided Costs-Based Comparison of Consumer-Scale Energy Storage Control Approaches Lubov Petrichenko, Roman Petrichenko, Antans Sauhats, Karlis Baltputnis / Riga Technical University, Latvia

2. Techno-economic analyis of battery storage for peak shaving and frequency containment reserve Peter Ahcin, Kjersti Berg, Idar Petersen / SINTEF Energy Research AS, Norway

3. Monte Carlo simulations of Large-Scale Storage impact in Distribution Network Jernej Zupancic, Edin Lakić, Tomi Medved, Andrej Gubina / Faculty of Electrical Engineering, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia

4. Optimal Economical and Technical Sizing Tool for Battery Energy Storage Systems Supplying Simultaneous Services to the Power System Dario Siface / RSE SpA, Italy

5. A profitability analysis of a consumer’s aggregation with storage system in dispatching market Giuseppe Barone, Daniele Menniti, Anna Pinnarelli, Nicola Sorrentino, Pasquale Vizza / University of Calabria, Italy

6. Strategic operation of storage in energy markets: an EPEC approach Mihaly Dolanyi1,2, Kenneth Bruninx1,2,3, Geert Deconinck4, Erik Delarue1,2 / 1Division of Applied Mechanics & Energy Conversion, Mechanical Engineering, KU Leuven, Celestijnenlaan 300, Leuven, Belgium; 2EnergyVille, Thor Park 8310, Genk, Belgium; 3VITO, Boeretang 200, Mol, Belgium; 4Electrical Energy and Computer Architectures, KU Leuven, Kasteelpark Arenberg 10, Leuven, Belgium

7. Multi-Timescale Forecasting of Battery Energy Storage State-of-Charge under Frequency Containment Reserve for Normal Operation Aleksei Mashlakov, Samuli Honkapuro, Ville Tikka, Arto Kaarna, Lasse Lensu / LUT University, Finland

43 PS 51: SYSTEM OPERATION, MODELLING, BALANCING AND AS

Time: Friday, 20.09.2019, 16:00 Location: P1 Session Chair: Dr. Abinet Tesfaye Eseye, Aalto University

1. Reliability assessment of PV units in primary and secondary frequency control ancillary services Iason Avramiotis-Falireas1, Christos Konstantinopoulos1,2, Saverio Bolognani3, Dominic Groß3, Aby Chacko4, Gabriela Hug2 / 1Swissgrid AG, Switzerland; 2Power Systems Laboratory, ETH Zürich; 3Automatic Control Laboratory, ETH Zürich; [email protected]

2. Impact of dynamic line rating on redispatch Gerald Blumberg, Christoph Weber / University of Duisburg-Essen, House of Energy Markets and Finance, Germany

3. Trade-Offs associated with the spatial allocation of future onshore wind generation capacity – a case study for Germany Philip Tafarte1, Paul Lehmann2 / 1University of Leipzig, Germany; 2Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ

4. Coordinating consumer-centric market and grid operation on distribution grid Tommaso Orlandini1, Tiago Soares2, Tiago Sousa1, Pierre Pinson1 / 1DTU, Denmark; 2INESC TEC, Portugal

5. Model-based assessment of electricity storage in a European system producing hydrogen and hydrocarbons from renewable energy Stavroula Evangelopoulou, Maria Kannavou, Georgios Zazias, Pantelis Capros / E3mlab, National Technical University of Athens, Greece

6. A distributed load flow application for multipartite grid operators’ coordination Stefano Guido Rinaldo, Andrea Ceresoli, Giuseppe Prettico / Joint Research Centre, Italy

7. Novel approach for pricing systems based on Inage domain method Aleksandra Baczyńska, Waldemar Niewiadomski / Lodz University of Technology, Poland

44 PS 52: ENERGY PRICES & FORECASTING

Time: Friday, 20.09.2019, 16:00 Location: P2 Session Chair: Dr. Hasan Fleyeh, Dalarna University

1. Market Simulator Supported Power Trading David Grgic, Jan Bohinec, Ludvik Bartelj, Jakob Kostravec, Dijana Makivic Grilc / Gen-I, Slovenia

2. Hybrid artificial neural networks-based models for electricity spot price forecasting - a review Fan Zhang, Hasan Fleyeh / Dalarna university, Sweden

3. Impact of Gas Price on Electricity Price Forecasting via Supervised Learning and Random Walk Gokturk Poyrazoglu / Ozyegin University, Turkey

4. Probabilistic Forecasting of Reserve Power Prices in Germany using Quantile Regression Christopher Jahns, Christoph Weber / House of Energy Markets and Finance, University Duisburg-Essen, Germany

5. Long-term scheduling model of Swiss hydropower Olga Weiss, Giacomo Pareschi, Oliver Schwery, Michele Bolla, Gil Georges, Konstantinos Boulouchos / ETH, Switzerland

6. Analysis and Simulation of Local Energy Markets Isabel Praça1, Sérgio Ramos1, Rui Andrade1, Allon Soares da Silva1,2, Everthon Taghori Sica2 / 1GECAD - Knowledge Engineering and Decision Support Research Centre, School of engineering Polytechnic of Porto (ISEP/IPP), Porto, Portugal; 2Federal Institute of Santa Catarina (IFSC) Campus Florianópolis, Florianópolis, Brazil

7. Modeling forecasting errors of fluctuating renewables and electrical loads Moritz Nobis1, Jacqueline Clever1, Nicolas Thie1, Armin Schnettler2 / 1RWTH Aachen University, Germany; 2Siemens AG

45 PS 53: ELECTRICITY MARKETS

Time: Friday, 20.09.2019, 16:00 Location: P3 Session Chair: Prof. Anke Weidlich, University of Freiburg

1. Introduction of an approach to develop dynamic electricity prices for residential customers Julia Freier1,2, Arnold Mark2, Jens Hesselbach1 / 1Department for Sustainable Products and Processes (upp), University of Kassel, Germany; 2Bosch Thermotechnik GmbH, Germany

2. Future merit order dynamics: A model-based impact analysis of ambitious carbon prices on the electricity spot market in Germany Fabian Scheller, Hashem Alkhatib, Hendrik Kondziella, Sören Graupner, Thomas Bruckner / Leipzig University, Germany

3. Reformulations of a Bilevel Model for Detection of Tacit Collusion in Deregulated Electricity Markets Emre Çelebi1, Güvenç Şahin2, Danial Esmaeili Aliabadi2 / 1Kadir Has University, Fatih/ Istanbul, Turkey; 2Sabancı University, Tuzla/Istanbul, Turkey

4. Effects of a Coal Phase-Out on Market Dynamics: Results from a Simulation Model for Germany Ramiz Qussous1, Thomas Künzel2, Anke Weidlich1 / 1University of Freiburg, Germany; 2Fichtner GmbH & Co. KG

46 PS 54: INNOVATIVE APPROACHES IN ENERGY MARKETS

Time: Friday, 20.09.2019, 16:00 Location: P4 Session Chair: Jelena Stojkovic, School of Electrical Engineering, University of Belgrade

1. Blockchain-based Peer-to-Peer Energy Trade: A Critical Review of Disruptive Potential Simon Johanning, Thomas Bruckner Institute for Infrastructure and Resource Management, University of Leipzig, Germany;

2. Shapley-Value-Based Distribution of the Costs of Solar Photovoltaic Plant Grid Connection Lubov Petrichenko1, Laila Zemite1, Marija Zima-Bočkarjova2, Aivo Jasevics1 / 1Riga Technical University, Latvia; 2ABB Corporate Research Center, Baden- Dättwil, Switzerland;

3. Mid-term operation planning for energy markets management systems Waldemar Niewiadomski / Lodz University of Technology, Poland;

4. Multi-Objective Optimal Charging Control of Electric Vehicles in PV charging station Jelena Stojkovic / School of Electrical Engineering, University of Belgrade, Serbia

47 TECHNICAL TOURS

TECHNICAL TOUR 1: ENERGETIKA LJUBLJANA

When: Wednesday, 18.09.2019, 15:30–17:00 Meeting point: Main hall of the Faculty of Electrical Engineering at 15:00 Registration: Those interested in join- ing last minute need to contact confer- ence organizers about open spots

Energetika Ljubljana is a company for tem. Distribution of natural gas in Lju- the comprehensive provision of ener- bljana began in 1861, when the first gas gy, with which it realizes its vision of a lanterns were lit on the streets. Today, stable and environmentally responsi- the network is one of the largest, most ble energy company. It manages two developed and most diverse systems infrastructure systems for the remote for the district energy supply in this energy supply, namely the district part of Europe. heating system and the gas supply sys-

TECHNICAL TOUR 2: RCERO

When: Thursday, 19.09.2019, 15:00–17:00 Meeting point: Main hall of the Faculty of Electrical Engineering at 14:45 Registration: Those interested in join- ing last minute need to contact confer- ence organizers about open spots

Ljubljana Regional Waste Manage- which deals with a third of all waste in ment Centre (RCERO Ljubljana) is a Slovenia, state-of-the-art sustainable unique and the most sustainable fa- technology is used to process waste cility for waste recovery. It is the larg- in facilities for mechanical biological est cohesion environmental project in waste treatment. RCERO Ljubljana re- Slovenia, combining 37 municipalities. covers natural resources, practices re- In one of the largest centres in Europe, use, and optimises and closes loops.

48 SPECIAL SESSIONS: H2020 PROJECTS

Horizon 2020 is the biggest EU Research and Innovation programme ever with nearly €80 billion of funding available over 7 years (2014 to 2020) – in addition to the private investment that this money will attract. It promises more break- throughs, discoveries and world-firsts by taking great ideas from the lab to the market. https://ec.europa.eu/programmes/horizon2020

In accordance with European Commission (EC) and its document “Guidelines to the Rules on Open Access to Scientific Publications and Open Access to Research Data in Horizon 2020″ interested audience can attend special sessions free of charge!«

49 Wednesday, 18.09.2019 / 14:00–15:30

Location: P1-C0

The main aim of COMPILE is to show the opportunities of energy islands for decarbonisation of energy supply, com- munity building and creating environmental and socio- economic benefits.

https://www.compile-project.eu

Speakers: Mr. Stanislas d’ Herbemont, REScoop.eu Mr. Gašper Artač, PETROL Mr. Tomi Medved, UL Mr. Boris Pavlin, Zelena Energetska Zadruga – ZEZ

Location: P2-C0

CROSSBOW goal is to propose the shared use of resources to foster cross-border management of variable renewable energies and storage units, enabling a higher penetration of clean energies whilst reducing network operational costs and improving economic benefits of clean energies and storage units.

http://crossbowproject.eu/

Speakers: Mr. Manuel Serrano Matoses, ETRA Mrs. Tadeja Babnik, ELPROS Mr. Jan Jeriha, UL Mr. Stefan Sulakov, ESO

50 Location: P3-C0

The FutureFlow (Designing eTrading Solutions for Elec- tricity Balancing and Redispatching in Europe) project is expanding its scope of operation of so-called secondary frequency control from generation to consumption. With- in the project, the three level IT architecture has been de- veloped connecting the Flexibility aggregation platform with the Regional cross-border balancing platform and TSOs environment. The complete IT architecture enables real-time field pilot tests with DR&DGs in Austria, Slovenia, Hungary and Romania. Over 100 DR&DG units with overall reserve power exceeding 50 MW were tested their capa- bility of providing the most complex balancing services, first within the local TSO environment and afterwards in the cross-border real-time tests. As a development proj- ect, FutureFlow did not remain on the level of scientific contributions, because industry offers their services in the real economy and will be able to apply developed proto- type platforms after the project’s conclusion.

Speakers: Mr. Boštjan Korošec, Talum Mr. Darko Kramar, ELES Mr. Rok Lacko, GEN-I Mr. Peter Nemček, cyberGRID Mr. Andrej Souvent, EIMV

51 Thursday, 19.09.2019 / 14:00–15:30

Location: P1-C0

The OSMOSE project gathers six transmission network operators (TSOs), eleven research partners and sixteen in- dustry and market players (manufacturers, solution pro- viders, producers, energy service companies) who address the need to identify and develop flexibilities required to integrate a high share of renewables (RES) in the energy system.

https://www.osmose-h2020.eu/

Speakers: Mr. Miran Kavrečič, Holding Slovenske elektrarne Mr. Maxime Lâasri, Réseau de d’Électricité Mr. Dario Siface, Ricerca sul Sistema Energetico – RSE S.p.A. Mr. Gregor Gostinčar, External expert at ELES d.o.o.

Location: P2-C0

STORY is a European project researching new energy stor- age technologies and their benefits in distribution systems and involves 18 Partner Institutions in 7 different European countries. STORY wants to demonstrate and evaluate in- novative approaches for energy storage systems. The chal- lenge is to find solutions, which are affordable, secure and ensure an increased percentage of self-supply.

http://horizon2020-story.eu/

Speakers: Mr. Andreas Tuerk, Joanneum Research Mr. Andrej F. Gubina, UL Mr. Marjan Jerele, Elektro Gorenjska Mr. Ervin Planinc, ELES

52 Location: P3-C0

CONSEED research project aims to find out through sur- veys and field trials among households and various eco- nomic sectors across Europe if European consumers pay attention to energy labels when they buy an electric appli- ance, a car or a house.

https://www.conseedproject.eu/

Speakers: Mr. James Carrol, TDC Dublin Mr. Edin Lakić, UL Mr. Tomi Medved, UL Mr. Jure Vetršek, IRI UL

53 Friday, 20.09.2019 / 14:00–15:30

Location: P1-C0

InterFlex aims to empower distribution network operators (DSOs) in the transition to more flexible local energy sys- tems. Within three years of the project lifetime, Interflex plans to carry out six demonstrations in five European countries – Czech Republic, France, Germany, Nether- lands and Sweden – to test the flexibility of distribution networks, innovative IT solutions and increased network automation.

https://interflex-h2020.com/

The GOFLEX (Generalized Operational FLEXibility for In- tegrating Renewables in the Distribution Grid) project developed a marketplace for distributed flexibility in en- ergy systems with selectable cloud-based services and a unique way of collecting and trading available flexibilities.

https://www.goflex-community.eu/

Speakers: Mr. Christian Dumbs, Enedis Mr. Marcel Willems, Enexis Mr. Thibaut Wagner, Enedis Mr. Torben Bach Pedersen, Aalborg University Mr. Zoran Marinšek, INEA Mr. Ludwig Karg, B.A.U.M. Consult GmbH

54 Location: P2-C0

The DOMINOES project aims to enable the discovery and development of new demand response, aggregation, grid management and peer-to-peer trading services by de- signing, developing and validating a transparent and scal- able local energy market solution. The project will show how DSOs can dynamically and actively manage grid bal- ance in the emerging future where microgrids, ultra-dis- tributed generation and energy independent communi- ties will be prevalent.

http://dominoesproject.eu/

Speakers: Mr. Samuli Honkapuro, LUT University Mr. Jan Segerstam, Empower Mr. Ilari Alaperä, Fortum Mr. Stanislas d’ Herbemont, REScoop.eu

55 SOCIAL PROGRAMME

Wednesday, 18.09.2019

CITY TOUR

When: 18:00-19:00 Meeting point: Prešeren’s square, Ljubljana city centre

It would be a pity not to admire Ljubljana’s beauties while attending the confer- ence, so we are organizing a city tour.

56 WELCOME RECEPTION

When: 19:00-22:00 Location: Cankarjev dom (CD) Club Address: Cankarjev dom, Cultural and Congress center, Prešernova cesta 10 (CD Club is accessible by taking a lift from the Small Gallery)

A stunning area with panoramic windows overlooking the city rooftops, the CD Club is located high up on the 6th floor of Cankarjev dom. It is an ideal venue for artistic events, social gatherings, receptions, parties, round-table discussions and business lunches. As a networking space and catering area allowing for a real-life club atmosphere, the venue may be used for corporate hospitality or private events. The modern and comfortable interior extends out onto the ter- race, a magical setting for drinks receptions or social gatherings over the warmer months.

How to get there? Directions from the Faculty of Electrical Engineering: Walking distance: app. 1,1 km By bus: departure from “Hajdrihova” station - bus no. 1 direction “Vižmarje” or bus no. 6 direction “Dolgi most” - exit “Drama” and app. 400 m walk to Cankarjev dom

57 Thursday, 19.09.2019

GALA DINNER & BEST PAPER AWARD

When: 19:00-23:00 Meeting point: Intercontinental Hotel Ljubljana Address: Slovenska cesta 59 (the closest bus station is “Bavarski dvor”)

Opened in September 2017, the InterContintenal Ljubljana is a 5-star property lo- cated in the centre of Ljubljana. This hotel features a panoramic wellness and spa centre with an indoor pool, as well as a rooftop restaurant serving international and local fare.

Friday, 20.09.2019

CLOSING EVENT - BARBEQUE PARTY

When: 18:00-20:00 Location: Faculty of Electrical Engineering, University of Ljubljana Address: Trzaska cesta 25, 1000 Ljubljana

58 OTHER INFORMATION

Address of the Conference Venue

Faculty of Electrical Engineering, University of Ljubljana, Trzaska cesta 25, SI-1000 Ljubljana

Phone number: 00386 1 476 84 11

Internet Access

Open wireless internet connection is included in your registration fee (select “FE public”, no password is required).

EDUROAM is available in all buildings on the campus. All participants without EDUROAM access can visit the Conference Office and get a personal username and password for internet access. Scan for the network VPN/WEB and connect to the network. Afterwards, open your browser and enter the username and pass- word from the Conference Office.

Smoking

FE UL is a non-smoking facility. It is prohibited also to smoke in front of the main entrance. We kindly ask you to respect this.

Emergency Situations and Medical Services

In case of emergency call 112 (SOS – Ambulance, Fire Brigade) or 113 (Police). These calls are free. No region code is required.

59 Public Transportation

Please note that for using public transportation in Ljubljana, you need to have purchased and topped-up your Urbana card. Urbana card cannot be purchased or topped-up on the bus. Additionally, the bus fare cannot be paid directly on the bus in cash.

Taxi

We recommend you to order a taxi service by phone because stopping a taxi on the street could be more expensive.

Time Zone

Time zone currently used in Slovenia is CEST (Central Summer European Time). Slovenia is thus two hours ahead of the Greenwich Mean Time (GMT+2).

60 1 - Faculty of Electrical Engineering 2 - Cankarjev dom 3 - Prešeren Square 4 - InterContinental Ljubljana 5 - Bus Station Ljubljana Plans (Maps) 6 - Train Station Ljubljana

5 6 4

3 2

1

61 ELES is the system operator of the electric power transmission network of the Republic of Slovenia. With a professional approach, know-how and advanced technology, ELES has been providing safe, reliable and uninterrupted transmission of electricity. Regarding the implementation of smart networks and the acquisition of European resources, ELES is at the very top of the European system operators. Strategic goals and sub-goals, set in the Long-Term Strategic Plan for 2016-2020, are: smart network investments, ensuring flexibility of system services and maximisation of cross-border transmission capabilities in the frame- work of the existing network. ELES is engaged to research and development projects like NEDO a three-year smart networks project, which uses environmentally-friendly solutions to tackle the challenges of the modern electricity system in light of sustainable develop- ment; FutureFlow that explores and proves how to include active (advanced) consumers into the secondary frequency regulation; Osmose project will increase the effectiveness and usage of classic and modern system power storages and reduce user expenses in the long run; Migrate is focused on seeking innovative solutions or answers to questions related to new operating concepts, protection and ensuring quality electricity and Sincro.Grid, an investment project of smart networks of European importance in the area of Slovenia and Croatia.

62 BSP Energy Exchange is a Slovenian power exchange company that has just recently celebrated its 10th an- niversary. BSP goes hand-in-hand with its almost 40 members to offer suitable products for their trading ac- tivities on day-ahead, intraday and balancing, and long- term auction trading segments. By constantly develop- ing power exchange trading, BSP provides high-quality and comprehensive services of a liquid, competitive and transparently organised electricity market, thereby se- curing its members safe trading and reducing their risks and costs. After clearing 468 million euro of spot trans- actions and with almost 8 TWh of traded volume at spot markets, representing more than 50 % of Slovenian con- sumption in the year 2018, BSP looks optimistically into further development and by that delivering value to its members, stakeholders and overall electricity market.

The is the largest and leading Slovenian energy company, the principal strategic supplier of products and other energy products in Slovenia, the largest group in terms of turnover, one of the largest Slovenian companies in terms of profit and one of the most successful business entities in Slovenia at the same time. With its clearly de- fined strategic orientation and development priorities it actively participates in shaping the Slovenian energy environment, currently also becoming an important player on the energy markets of the wider region of South-Eastern Europe. PETROL is particularly distin- guished for the quality of its products and services, its great reputation, highly recognised brands and solid financial position.

63