Pres 08 marvin n benjamin siemens

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Infrastructure & Cities Sector © Siemens AG 2012. All rights reserved E-mobility market: Perspectives and Opportunities 6 November 2012 Johannesburg
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Driving EV Policy & Charging Infrastructure 6 & 7 November 2012 South Africa

Transcript of Pres 08 marvin n benjamin siemens

Page 1: Pres 08 marvin n benjamin siemens

Infrastructure & Cities Sector

© Siemens AG 2012. All rights reserved

E-mobility market:Perspectives and Opportunities6 November 2012Johannesburg

Page 2: Pres 08 marvin n benjamin siemens

Infrastructure & Cities Sector

© Siemens AG 2012. All rights reserved

Megatrends – the world's toughest questions

Climate Change Globalisation The average global surface temperature has

increased by 0.76° C compared to the 18th century.

11 of the 12 years between 1994 and 2005 rank among the 12 warmest since weather observations began.

Greenhouse gas emissions haven risen dramatically since industrialisation. Today we face the highest CO2 concentration in the atmosphere for the past 350,000 years.

From 1950 to 2004, the volume of global trade has increased 27.5-fold.

The number of global players has grown from 17,000 in 1980 to over 70,000 today.

Ocean freight has increased over the past four decades from less than 6,000 billion ton-miles to over 27,500 billion ton-miles a year.

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Infrastructure & Cities Sector

© Siemens AG 2012. All rights reserved

UrbanisationDemographic Change

Megatrends – the world's toughest questions

Average life expectancy worldwide will increase to 72 years in 2025 from 46.6 years in 1950.

World population will grow from more than 6 billion now to 8 billion by 2025.

95 % of the global population growth is taking place in developing countries.

The 65+ generation will nearly double worldwide by 2030 (from 7 % to 12 %).

2007: For the first time in history, more people live in cities than in rural areas.

Today: 280 million people live in megacities(> 10 million residents).

2030: 60 % of the world’s population will live in cities.

Urban conglomerations contribute a high share of a nation’s economic output: Tokyo provides 40 % of Japan’s GDP, Paris generates 30 % of France’s GDP.

Page 4: Pres 08 marvin n benjamin siemens

Infrastructure & Cities Sector

© Siemens AG 2012. All rights reserved

The dawn of the "urban millennium" has started

In 2007 ~50 % of the world's population was living in cities, an

increase from 3.5B to 4.7B by 2030

50 % of world GDPis produced in cities with a populationover 750K

75 % of energy consumed in cities;

80 % of CO2 emissionsare produced in cities

Major energy and

climate factor

Population

Regionalpower-houses

urban millennium

Page 5: Pres 08 marvin n benjamin siemens

Infrastructure & Cities Sector

© Siemens AG 2012. All rights reserved

Transportation of people and goods is top priority for metropolitan areas as …

*Source: Siemens Megacity Challenges Study

... most important driver for “Quality of Life”

… key success factor for global competitiveness

… # 1 on mayors’ political agenda*

Page 6: Pres 08 marvin n benjamin siemens

Infrastructure & Cities Sector

© Siemens AG 2012. All rights reserved

Sustainable and livable Electromobility for CO2-free, quiet and safe individual mobility with intelligent services, creating a higher quality of life and an attractive, green city

Smart and competitive Electromobility as part of Smart Grid e.g. smart charging infrastructure with load management function and E-Vehicle battery as future energy storage

The basic needs of a city drive the market for intelligent infrastructure solutions

This makes electromobility an attractive and sustainable answer to the requirements of our cities

Sustainable

Competitive

Livable

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Infrastructure & Cities Sector

© Siemens AG 2012. All rights reserved

Electromobility: part of smart grid

• as a smart consumer with load management functionality• as energy storage

Electromobility: part of intelligent traffic management systems

• as car sharing solution• as integrated traffic solution • as information holder

Electromobility.part of smart buidings

• as energy storage• as integrated element in load management between building consumers and Infrastructure

Electromobility: The smart interface for grids, traffic management systems and buildings

Smart Grids Traffic Management Systems Smart Buildings

Integrated solutions for traffic control, management and information covering the complete value chain Tolling Comprehensive parking management solutions Complete service and operations (traffic and public lighting)

Full interactivity – Price signals, feedback, load reduction, etc.

Storage capability – Balancing renewables and optimize energy price

Production source – Sell back to the grid, reduce grid dependence, etc.

Intelligent management of load between energy generation and consumption

Integration of renewable energy allied with grid stability and quality

Two-way energy flow combined with decentralised energy generation

Page 8: Pres 08 marvin n benjamin siemens

Infrastructure & Cities Sector

© Siemens AG 2012. All rights reserved

Welcome to the World of ElectromobilityIntegrated Modular Solutions

Inductive Technology –

Cable free Charging

within 2 to 8 h

Swapping Technology –

Fast battery change

DC Technology –

Fast Charging

within 30 min

AC Technology –

Normal Charging

within 1 to 8 h

Drivergy: Integrated modular solutions to meet all requirements - from charging stations for DC and AC and inductive charging to a powerful software suite

Software Suite –

Charging Infrastructure Administration

Software Suite –

Load Management

Software Suite –

Customer Data Management

Software Suite –

Fleet Management

Page 9: Pres 08 marvin n benjamin siemens

Infrastructure & Cities Sector

© Siemens AG 2012. All rights reserved

Welcome to the World of ElectromobilityIndividual Solutions

Pubic Charging –Gas Station

within 1 to 8 h

AC/DC Charging Point

Home Charging –

within 8 h

AC/DC Wall Box

Public Charging –

within 2 to 8 h

Inductive Charging

Pubic Charging – Parking area

within 1 to 8 h

AC Charging Point

Semi-public Charging – Hotel

within 1 to 8 h

AC Charging Point

Semi-public Charging –Fleet

within 30 min.

DC Charging Point

Corporate Charging –Employees

within 1 to 8 h

AC Charging Point

Corporate Charging –Fleet Vehicles

within 30 min.

DC Charging Point

Semi-pubic Charging –Parking garage

within 1 to 8 h

AC/DC Charging Point

Semi-public Charging –Fleet, Taxies

within 8 h

Inductive Charging

Semi-pubic Charging – Malls

within 1 to 8 h

AC/DC Charging Point

Home Charging –

within 8 h

Inductive System

Page 10: Pres 08 marvin n benjamin siemens

Infrastructure & Cities Sector

© Siemens AG 2012. All rights reserved

■EV owner charges in public spaces

■Charging mostly with Charging Points

■Restricted areas (e.g. at work), owned/operated by private companies

■Charging mostly with wall boxes and Charging Points

Electromobility in practice

Public

■EV owner charges car at home

■Charging mostly with wall boxes

Home / Private Semi-public

Loca

tion

Scen

ario

■Only very limited persons have access to the equipment

■No identification / payment required or e.g. by key

Cus

tom

er

■Large number of persons, but limited to a certain group (e.g. employees)

■ Identification / payment via ID card, batch or tags

■ In principal everyone may use the station (national or international)

■ Identification / payment via cash, credit card, mobile phone, roaming

■ Private users ■ Real Estates ■ Service Providers■ Utilities (DSO)

■ Municipalities■ Service Providers■ Utilities (DSO)■ Fleet Operators■ Parking Facility Operators

■ Municipalities■ Service Providers■ Utilities (DSO)■ Fleet Customers

■ Gas stations■ Companies■ Real Estates■ Hotels, Malls,…

■ OEM■ Fleet Customers

Page 11: Pres 08 marvin n benjamin siemens

Infrastructure & Cities Sector

© Siemens AG 2012. All rights reserved

Electro-mobility platform

Energy Suppliers

Gas Stations Private UsersCar

ManufacturersFleet Operators

Making it easy to design individual electromobility solutions – whether for home, fleet or public parking spaces.

CitiesParking

Facility OperatorsCompanies,Real Estate

Service Providers

Hotel, Restaurants, Malls

Page 12: Pres 08 marvin n benjamin siemens

Infrastructure & Cities Sector

© Siemens AG 2012. All rights reserved

Benefits to Cities and Communities

Mobility that is clean, quiet, andsafe: Enhanced quality of life for your city.

Green city thanks to reduced CO2 emissions and traffic noise – for an enhanced quality of life

Unique and competitive city thanks to intermodal linkage of public and private transportation, using electric vehicles

Safe, reliable and modular integrated solution for electromobility from a single source

Comprehensive service – from the initial consultation to successful operation – and customer-friendly operating models

Page 13: Pres 08 marvin n benjamin siemens

Infrastructure & Cities Sector

© Siemens AG 2012. All rights reserved

Electric Vehicle InfrastructureReference: London Project

London has one of the largest e-vehicle charging networks in the UK.

It seeks to reduce pollution, encourage the uptake of electric vehicles and establish the City at the centre of the electric vehicle revolution.

Siemens provides the underlying IT systems, infrastructure and services, the portal and customer interface.

Project details - Hardware:

Install 1 300 public charging points from various manufacturers by 2013

Project details - Software:

Operational services, including the customer call centre

Back office services to support the city-wide charging network

Integration of the installed charging points from different manufacturers

Self service and assisted customer portal

Secure payment services

Operational reporting and fault management

Page 14: Pres 08 marvin n benjamin siemens

Infrastructure & Cities Sector

© Siemens AG 2012. All rights reserved

Electric Vehicle InfrastructureProject “Model Region Electromobility Munich - Drive eCharged”

Joint Research Project of Siemens and cooperation partner BMW Group and utility 'Stadtwerke München’ (SWM)

32 Public Charging Points, supplied with SWM green power: Charging capacity between 3,7 kW and 22 kW Connection: Schuko® socket, 3-phase IEC Type 2 connection Identification via RFID card

36 Home Charging Points, supplied with SWM green power: Charging capacity 22 kW 3-phase IEC Type 2 connection

Project Targets: User behavior and preferences analysed and applied for

product and service development. Research, development and testing of an integrated DC fast

charging system with BMW ActiveE vehicle. With the following charging point features:

Maximum charging power: 50 kW DC-Output voltage: 50 – 450 V Connection: IEC 62196-3 DC-Type-2

optimized for DC-charging up to 70 A Higher communication to vehicle via PLC (Power Line

Communication) Identification via RFID card

Effects of electric vehicles and charging infrastructure on power grids and measures to back and improve the power grid quality.

Page 15: Pres 08 marvin n benjamin siemens

Infrastructure & Cities Sector

© Siemens AG 2012. All rights reserved

Electric Vehicle InfrastructureProject 4-S (4-Sustainelectromobility)

A Siemens test fleet of up to 100 electric vehicles in Germany

Electric cars and the corresponding infrastructure are tested by Siemens employees

Data from the drivers is streamed directly into the ongoing development of infrastructure products and software solutions

Charging point technical data: Charging capacity between 3.7 kW and 22 kW Connections: Schuko® safety outlet, three-phase IEC

62196-2 type 2 connection Identification through RFID cards

Home charging station technical data: Charging capacity 22 kW Three-phase IEC 62196-2 type 2 connection

Software functionalities: Monitoring and control Local load management Car-sharing supported by fleet-management solution

Page 16: Pres 08 marvin n benjamin siemens

Infrastructure & Cities Sector

© Siemens AG 2012. All rights reserved

Some conclusions

E-mobility in South Africa will move past the conceptual phases and

offer concrete market opportunities

Public Private Partnerships are an option in rolling out total

e-mobility solutions

Government is a key stakeholder from a policy perspective

Electro-mobility offers new business opportunities (implications

for job creation)

Page 17: Pres 08 marvin n benjamin siemens

Infrastructure & Cities Sector

© Siemens AG 2012. All rights reserved

Thank you for your time and attention.