Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Electricity as (big) data

Electronic data

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Electricity as (big) data: metering, spatiotemporal granularity and value

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Electricity as (big) data: metering, spatiotemporal granularity and value. / Kragh-Furbo, Mette; Walker, Gordon Peter.
In: Big Data and Society, Vol. 5, No. 1, 01.06.2018, p. 1-12.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Kragh-Furbo M, Walker GP. Electricity as (big) data: metering, spatiotemporal granularity and value. Big Data and Society. 2018 Jun 1;5(1):1-12. Epub 2018 Feb 9. doi: 10.1177/2053951718757254

Author

Bibtex

@article{e85b8248419f4a44bc5c19f439b3e859,
title = "Electricity as (big) data: metering, spatiotemporal granularity and value",
abstract = "Electricity is hidden within wires and networks only revealing its quantity and flow when metered. The making of its properties into data is therefore particularly important to the relations that are formed around electricity as a produced and managed phenomenon. We propose approaching all metering as a situated activity, a form of quantification work in which data is made and becomes mobile in particular spatial and temporal terms, enabling its entry into data infrastructures and schemes of evaluation and value production. We interrogate the transition from the pre-digital into the making of bigger, more spatiotemporally granular electricity data, through focusing on those actors selling and materialising new metering technologies, data infrastructures and services for larger businesses and public sector organisations in the UK. We examine the claims of truth and visibility that accompany these shifts and their enrolment into management techniques that serve to more precisely apportion responsibility for, and evaluate the status of, particular patterns and instances of electricity use. We argue that whilst through becoming big data electricity flow is now able to be known and given identity in significantly new terms, enabling new relations to be formed with the many heterogeneous entities implicated in making and managing energy demand, it is necessary to sustain some ambivalence as to the performative consequences that follow for energy governance. We consider the wider application of our conceptualisation of metering, reflecting on comparisons with the introduction of new metering systems in domestic settings and as part of other infrastructural networks",
keywords = "Electricity, measurement, metering, smart energy, spatiotemporal, visibility",
author = "Mette Kragh-Furbo and Walker, {Gordon Peter}",
year = "2018",
month = jun,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1177/2053951718757254",
language = "English",
volume = "5",
pages = "1--12",
journal = "Big Data and Society",
issn = "2053-9517",
publisher = "SAGE Publications Ltd",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Electricity as (big) data

T2 - metering, spatiotemporal granularity and value

AU - Kragh-Furbo, Mette

AU - Walker, Gordon Peter

PY - 2018/6/1

Y1 - 2018/6/1

N2 - Electricity is hidden within wires and networks only revealing its quantity and flow when metered. The making of its properties into data is therefore particularly important to the relations that are formed around electricity as a produced and managed phenomenon. We propose approaching all metering as a situated activity, a form of quantification work in which data is made and becomes mobile in particular spatial and temporal terms, enabling its entry into data infrastructures and schemes of evaluation and value production. We interrogate the transition from the pre-digital into the making of bigger, more spatiotemporally granular electricity data, through focusing on those actors selling and materialising new metering technologies, data infrastructures and services for larger businesses and public sector organisations in the UK. We examine the claims of truth and visibility that accompany these shifts and their enrolment into management techniques that serve to more precisely apportion responsibility for, and evaluate the status of, particular patterns and instances of electricity use. We argue that whilst through becoming big data electricity flow is now able to be known and given identity in significantly new terms, enabling new relations to be formed with the many heterogeneous entities implicated in making and managing energy demand, it is necessary to sustain some ambivalence as to the performative consequences that follow for energy governance. We consider the wider application of our conceptualisation of metering, reflecting on comparisons with the introduction of new metering systems in domestic settings and as part of other infrastructural networks

AB - Electricity is hidden within wires and networks only revealing its quantity and flow when metered. The making of its properties into data is therefore particularly important to the relations that are formed around electricity as a produced and managed phenomenon. We propose approaching all metering as a situated activity, a form of quantification work in which data is made and becomes mobile in particular spatial and temporal terms, enabling its entry into data infrastructures and schemes of evaluation and value production. We interrogate the transition from the pre-digital into the making of bigger, more spatiotemporally granular electricity data, through focusing on those actors selling and materialising new metering technologies, data infrastructures and services for larger businesses and public sector organisations in the UK. We examine the claims of truth and visibility that accompany these shifts and their enrolment into management techniques that serve to more precisely apportion responsibility for, and evaluate the status of, particular patterns and instances of electricity use. We argue that whilst through becoming big data electricity flow is now able to be known and given identity in significantly new terms, enabling new relations to be formed with the many heterogeneous entities implicated in making and managing energy demand, it is necessary to sustain some ambivalence as to the performative consequences that follow for energy governance. We consider the wider application of our conceptualisation of metering, reflecting on comparisons with the introduction of new metering systems in domestic settings and as part of other infrastructural networks

KW - Electricity

KW - measurement

KW - metering

KW - smart energy

KW - spatiotemporal

KW - visibility

U2 - 10.1177/2053951718757254

DO - 10.1177/2053951718757254

M3 - Journal article

VL - 5

SP - 1

EP - 12

JO - Big Data and Society

JF - Big Data and Society

SN - 2053-9517

IS - 1

ER -