This paper reports results from an empirical study that explored the potential of interactive electricity Demand-Shifting โ€“ a particular form of behavior change where electricity consumption is shifted towards times of the day when production is at its highest โ€“ in the context of residential solar electricity generation. We conducted an in-the-wild user study with eighteen households over a period of six months, combining electricity data from smart meters and smart plugs with in-depth interviews to explore laundry routines and washing machine usage for each household. The study highlights that, although washing machines can be considered to be โ€œshiftable appliancesโ€, the specific ways in which each household goes about shifting varies considerably. Furthermore, there is a clear need for ICTs to support people by analyzing current context and future plans to automate electricity demand-shifting and synchronization of both laundry and other appliances. Such support will help them maximize the self-consumption of micro-generated electricity while balancing this with environmental concerns, financial benefits and day-to-day issues relating to convenience. Index Termsโ€” Microgeneration, demand-shifting, in-home study, energy management.

https://dx.doi.org/10.2991/ict4s-14.2014.49

Cite Bibtex
@inproceedings{bourgeois:hal-01090643,
  TITLE = {Using Participatory Data Analysis to Understand Social Constraints and Opportunities of Electricity Demand-Shifting},
  AUTHOR = {Bourgeois, Jacky and Van Der Linden, Janet and Kortuem, Gerd and Rimmer, Christopher},
  URL = {https://hal.inria.fr/hal-01090643},
  BOOKTITLE = {2nd International Conference on ICT for Sustainability (ICT4S 2014)},
  ADDRESS = {Stockholm, Sweden},
  YEAR = {2014},
  MONTH = Aug,
  DOI = {10.2991/ict4s-14.2014.49},
  PDF = {https://hal.inria.fr/hal-01090643/file/ict4s-camera-ready.pdf},
  HAL_ID = {hal-01090643},
  HAL_VERSION = {v1},
}