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Fundamental changes are currently taking place in mod- ern energy systems and, particularly, in electrical ones. Infras- tructures have to satisfy conflicting requirements: providing reliable and secure services to an increasing number of customers, taking into account a rational use of energy and the protection of the environment. This last requirement drives major changes in electrical and energy systems where increasingly renewable en- ergy sources need to be connected to the grid. It is generally ac- knowledged that these sources need to be massive and distributed, in order to provide a non-negligible part of the consumed electri- cal energy [1]. It is also generally agreed that such integration of renewables into existing grids depends on the successful combi- nation of specific processes (e.g. demand side/response manage- ment, real-time consumption management, real-time local energy balance, accurate forecasting of renewables at continental, coun- try and regional scales) and new technologies (e.g. smart meters, agent-based distributed controls). Currently, there is a major effort from different research com- munities, in particular those of applied mathematics, control the- ory, computer science and, of course, power systems, to propose, discuss and validate new methodologies for the planning, opera- tion and control of future electrical and energy systems. It is within this context that Sustainable Energy, Grids and Networks (SEGAN) has been launched.
François Maréchal, Daniel Alexander Florez Orrego, Meire Ellen Gorete Ribeiro Domingos, Réginald Germanier
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