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Wasted Energy?: Illuminating Energy Data With Ontologies

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Wasted Energy? Illuminating Energy Data With Ontologies. / Remy, Christian; Tyler, Adam; Smith, Paul et al.
In: IEEE Pervasive Computing, Vol. 23, No. 2, 30.04.2024, p. 27-37.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Remy C, Tyler A, Smith P, Bates O, Friday A. Wasted Energy? Illuminating Energy Data With Ontologies. IEEE Pervasive Computing. 2024 Apr 30;23(2):27-37. Epub 2024 Apr 19. doi: 10.1109/MPRV.2024.3384673

Author

Remy, Christian ; Tyler, Adam ; Smith, Paul et al. / Wasted Energy? Illuminating Energy Data With Ontologies. In: IEEE Pervasive Computing. 2024 ; Vol. 23, No. 2. pp. 27-37.

Bibtex

@article{79c658cc04744a879a62f74531f2b7ee,
title = "Wasted Energy?: Illuminating Energy Data With Ontologies",
abstract = "Using pervasive computing to reduce energy demand of complex commercial premises is extremely challenging in practice. Yet, this is exactly what is needed to help organizations address climate and decarbonization targets. Complex and heterogenous data, changing policy and practice, evolving infrastructures and estates, multiple stakeholders, and transient and persistent faults hidden in longitudinal data from thousands of sensors, are just some of the challenges to overcome. In our multiyear experience of working to create software systems to help find energy savings and enable effective policy creation, we have found an important gap that complicates our efforts: missing business context. In this article, we contribute our key lessons learned so far; categorizing the different types of information missing that need to be captured; and describe how linking this sea of information meaningfully is one of the most important, yet most complicated endeavors in energy management. We offer ontologies as a way to bridge stakeholder domains, and offer unique opportunities for organizations and researchers in pervasive sustainability and beyond to create better tools for enabling improved practice and operation in smart energy management.",
keywords = "Buildings, Ontologies, Stakeholders, Energy management, Time series analysis, Streams, Metadata",
author = "Christian Remy and Adam Tyler and Paul Smith and Oliver Bates and Adrian Friday",
year = "2024",
month = apr,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1109/MPRV.2024.3384673",
language = "English",
volume = "23",
pages = "27--37",
journal = "IEEE Pervasive Computing",
issn = "1536-1268",
publisher = "Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Wasted Energy?

T2 - Illuminating Energy Data With Ontologies

AU - Remy, Christian

AU - Tyler, Adam

AU - Smith, Paul

AU - Bates, Oliver

AU - Friday, Adrian

PY - 2024/4/30

Y1 - 2024/4/30

N2 - Using pervasive computing to reduce energy demand of complex commercial premises is extremely challenging in practice. Yet, this is exactly what is needed to help organizations address climate and decarbonization targets. Complex and heterogenous data, changing policy and practice, evolving infrastructures and estates, multiple stakeholders, and transient and persistent faults hidden in longitudinal data from thousands of sensors, are just some of the challenges to overcome. In our multiyear experience of working to create software systems to help find energy savings and enable effective policy creation, we have found an important gap that complicates our efforts: missing business context. In this article, we contribute our key lessons learned so far; categorizing the different types of information missing that need to be captured; and describe how linking this sea of information meaningfully is one of the most important, yet most complicated endeavors in energy management. We offer ontologies as a way to bridge stakeholder domains, and offer unique opportunities for organizations and researchers in pervasive sustainability and beyond to create better tools for enabling improved practice and operation in smart energy management.

AB - Using pervasive computing to reduce energy demand of complex commercial premises is extremely challenging in practice. Yet, this is exactly what is needed to help organizations address climate and decarbonization targets. Complex and heterogenous data, changing policy and practice, evolving infrastructures and estates, multiple stakeholders, and transient and persistent faults hidden in longitudinal data from thousands of sensors, are just some of the challenges to overcome. In our multiyear experience of working to create software systems to help find energy savings and enable effective policy creation, we have found an important gap that complicates our efforts: missing business context. In this article, we contribute our key lessons learned so far; categorizing the different types of information missing that need to be captured; and describe how linking this sea of information meaningfully is one of the most important, yet most complicated endeavors in energy management. We offer ontologies as a way to bridge stakeholder domains, and offer unique opportunities for organizations and researchers in pervasive sustainability and beyond to create better tools for enabling improved practice and operation in smart energy management.

KW - Buildings

KW - Ontologies

KW - Stakeholders

KW - Energy management

KW - Time series analysis

KW - Streams

KW - Metadata

U2 - 10.1109/MPRV.2024.3384673

DO - 10.1109/MPRV.2024.3384673

M3 - Journal article

VL - 23

SP - 27

EP - 37

JO - IEEE Pervasive Computing

JF - IEEE Pervasive Computing

SN - 1536-1268

IS - 2

ER -