8
Stanford ARPA-E Initiative: Energy Reductions Through Sensors, Feedback, & Information Technology June A. Flora Precourt Energy Efficiency Center Principal Investigator: Byron Reeves Department of Communication Project Director: Carrie Armel

The Psychology of Energy Conservation: Are You Smarter Than A Refrigerator?

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

 

Citation preview

Page 1: The Psychology of Energy Conservation: Are You Smarter Than A Refrigerator?

Stanford ARPA-E Initiative:Energy Reductions

Through Sensors, Feedback, & Information Technology

June A. FloraPrecourt Energy Efficiency Center

Principal Investigator: Byron Reeves Department of Communication

Project Director: Carrie Armel Precourt Energy Efficiency Center

Page 2: The Psychology of Energy Conservation: Are You Smarter Than A Refrigerator?

Advanced Research Projects Agency – Energy (ARPA-E) • First FOA: 3,700 applications 37 awards (1 behavioral)• Stanford theme: “Leveraging wireless energy sensors with behavioral

science methods to maximize energy savings”• Duration: 2 years beginning April 1, 2010

Interdisciplinary• 20 projects• 15 faculty• 10 departments, 5 schools, 5 centers • 30+ students

Precourt Energy Efficiency Center

Stanford Prevention Research Center

Center for Integrated Facility Engineering

Human Sciences and Technologies Advanced Research Institute

Design for Change Lab

Stanford ARPA-E Initiative: Energy Reductions Through Sensors, Feedback, & Information Technology

Page 3: The Psychology of Energy Conservation: Are You Smarter Than A Refrigerator?

The opportunity

• A 10% reduction in energy use will lower the quantity of fossil fuels consumed and CO2 emissions produced by an amount roughly equal to a 25-fold increase in wind plus solar power, or a doubling of nuclear power (Sweeney, 2007).

• Much of the opportunity involves behavior change

Page 4: The Psychology of Energy Conservation: Are You Smarter Than A Refrigerator?

The problem• Billions spent gathering information

• Smart sensors and infrastructure• Tons of information

• But energy efficiency information is often dull• Smart sensors alone will not change behavior• Complex User Interfaces• Problems are distant• Feedback separated from behavior• “What I get” not obvious (even $)

• Behavior change requires user engagement with energy information, skills to change, and motivation to maintain

Page 5: The Psychology of Energy Conservation: Are You Smarter Than A Refrigerator?

The behaviors

• Eliminate wasted energy

• Purchase, install, and properly use technology

• Use settings & controls

• Maintenance of energy using appliances

• New behaviors that are lower energy

• Increase repeat behaviors

Page 6: The Psychology of Energy Conservation: Are You Smarter Than A Refrigerator?

Integration of components

Energy sensors(Smart meters

Home Area Networks (HAN)+

Web enabledcomputers and mobile devices

+Feedback

(visualization, informative, interactive, fun, normative)

+Behavior Change Interventions

(Games, incentives, competitions, curricula)

Utility Company

Utility Company

Central Server

Household Energy

Reduction

Household Energy

Reduction

Page 7: The Psychology of Energy Conservation: Are You Smarter Than A Refrigerator?

Community•Girl Scouts

•Retrofit Programs

Media•Feedback Interface •Multiplayer Game•Video Vignettes

•Web 2.0•Desktop Dashboard Gadget

•Phone apps

Technology •Sensors & Networking

•Computational Infrastructure•Behavior Related Analytics

Cross-Cutting Projects•Computer infrastructure for prototyping & analysis•Foundational work to inform interventions•Large-scale engineering & economic modeling

The Plan: Complementary Interventions

Policy•Novel Incentives

•Markets•Nudges to Purchase

EE Appliances

Page 8: The Psychology of Energy Conservation: Are You Smarter Than A Refrigerator?

The scaleable benefits1. Reduce residential & SMB energy use:

Use quantification to enable:• Feedback – personal and social • Social games• Incentives • Competitions • Data visualization

2. Refine sensor hardware and communication protocols

3. Develop programs: Create best practices with unprecedented speed, ease, cost, and scale

4. Transform evaluation: Ability to rapidly assess program efficacy

5. Improve economic and energy models to inform policy