IEEMC 2011 - First International E-Energy Market Challenge
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Website icac2011.cs.fiu.edu |
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Category autonomic computing
Deadline: February 21, 2011 | Date: June 14, 2011-June 18, 2011
Venue/Country: Karlsruhe, Germany
Updated: 2011-01-10 12:16:12 (GMT+9)
Call For Papers - CFP
First International E-Energy Market ChallengeToday's power grid control and dispatch strategies mainly rely on centralized control centers that manage a limited number of large power plants such that their output meets the fluctuating energy demands in real time. The need for a transition to renewable energy sources leads to a quickly increasing share of small energy generators with intermittent generation timelines. In combination with smart energy consumers that change their demand patterns over time, the purely centralized approach to power grid control becomes more and more difficult to maintain. Hence, a more flexible, decentralized, and self-organizing control infrastructure must be developed that can be actively managed to balance both the large grid as a whole, as well as the many lower voltage sub-grids with its many small energy generators (e.g. photovoltaic installations or combined-heat-and-power combustion engines). Depending on the granularity and the time frame of the traded power products, there will be a strong need for agents acting autonomously on behalf of their stakeholders. The clever use of concepts from autonomic and organic computing as well as from multi-agent systems and from economics will be essential for succeeding in the competition.One candidate for such a new control infrastructure is an energy market at the retail level, i.e. at the level of currently completely passive and unmanaged (low-voltage) distribution grids. To help mitigate the risk of instituting such markets in the real world, agent-based simulations of such markets can provide important insights. Workshop participants are thus invited to join in to a program of economic modeling and laboratory experimentation to understand and experiment with retail energy market design along with the performance of their own autonomous agents in a competitive simulation environment.We ask for submission of agent-based models and corresponding papers describing the design of trading agents for retail energy markets.We, moreover, want to present a competitive testbed environment for agent-based simulations along the lines of the well-established trading agent competitions. This trading agent competition for energy markets (Power TAC) is supposed to facilitate research and development of appropriate retail energy market structures along with corresponding software agents that can support or even automate decision making in these markets. This environment will model a market-based management structure for local and regional energy networks at multiple levels of complexity. It will closely model reality by using real historic data on energy production and consumption, weather, and consumer preferences. A more detailed description of the competition is available online at powertac.org. We hope to run a live competition at the workshop.Important Dates:Paper submission deadline: March 31, 2011Notification of acceptance: April 15, 2011Camera ready paper: May 15, 2011Workshop date: June 18, 2011Submissions and further informationAgent validation and testing is a cornerstone of agent-based simulations and therefore the key deliverable for workshop contributions is a functional energy agent implementation to be demonstrated at the workshop. Companion papers should be around 10 pages including the text, figures and references.The submissions must be formatted according to the ACM proceedings format. Papers can be submitted via the EasyChair submission system:www.easychair.org/account/signin.cgi?conf=ieemc11For any further questions, send your email to: ieemciism.uni-karlsruhe.deOrganisationOrganizing committeeChristof Weinhardt, KITWolfgang Ketter, RSMLilia Filipova-Neumann, FZIAnke Weidlich, SAP ResearchProgram committeeCarsten Block, Karlsruhe Institute of TechnologyJohn Collins, University of MinnesotaHellmuth Frey, EnBWChristoph Flath, FZISteven Kimbrough, Wharton School of BusinessSteffen Lamparter, SiemensDetlev Schumann, IBMOrestis Terzidis, SAP ResearchClemens van Dinther, Karlsruhe Institute of TechnologyHarald Vogt, SAP Research
Keywords: Accepted papers list. Acceptance Rate. EI Compendex. Engineering Index. ISTP index. ISI index. Impact Factor.
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