TY - GEN
T1 - Added value services for EV charging management
AU - Rodríguez-Sánchez, Raúl
AU - Vidal, Narcís
AU - Zabala, Eduardo
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2013 IEEE.
PY - 2013/11
Y1 - 2013/11
N2 - The deployment of Electrical Vehicles (EV) is not taking place at the expected rate. Consumers’ tendency to value losses higher than gains works against electric vehicles when comparing them to traditional solutions. In this context, added value services may support business models with additional incomes, business differentiation or appealing mobility concepts. In the frame of the Green eMotion FP7 project, added value services will be proposed and their implementation in backend systems studied, in order to permit a widespread and sustainable deployment of EVs.
Services and functionalities are delimited by business models defining the overall stakeholder relationship framework. Therefore, the latter will have direct influence, not only at economical level but also in technical aspects of the implementation of added value services. EV services are classified in two main groups: those provided by the EVs to the network and those provided by service providers to end-users. EVs characteristics make them especially suitable for service oriented business, while ICT solutions appear as key enablers of new sustainable mobility concepts. It is very important to decide which services and how these services need to be implemented to allow a wide range of business models to be applied.
Interoperability is another essential aspect when dealing with EVs, since all systems involved in service provision should be able to communicate with each other. This will allow EV users to have transparent and efficient driving experiences, together with lower cost solutions. New advances in communication standards definition and in interoperability assessment (COTEVOS FP7 EU project) are currently going on and will tackle this challenge.
AB - The deployment of Electrical Vehicles (EV) is not taking place at the expected rate. Consumers’ tendency to value losses higher than gains works against electric vehicles when comparing them to traditional solutions. In this context, added value services may support business models with additional incomes, business differentiation or appealing mobility concepts. In the frame of the Green eMotion FP7 project, added value services will be proposed and their implementation in backend systems studied, in order to permit a widespread and sustainable deployment of EVs.
Services and functionalities are delimited by business models defining the overall stakeholder relationship framework. Therefore, the latter will have direct influence, not only at economical level but also in technical aspects of the implementation of added value services. EV services are classified in two main groups: those provided by the EVs to the network and those provided by service providers to end-users. EVs characteristics make them especially suitable for service oriented business, while ICT solutions appear as key enablers of new sustainable mobility concepts. It is very important to decide which services and how these services need to be implemented to allow a wide range of business models to be applied.
Interoperability is another essential aspect when dealing with EVs, since all systems involved in service provision should be able to communicate with each other. This will allow EV users to have transparent and efficient driving experiences, together with lower cost solutions. New advances in communication standards definition and in interoperability assessment (COTEVOS FP7 EU project) are currently going on and will tackle this challenge.
KW - EV charging
KW - business model
KW - interoperability
KW - added value service
KW - EV charging
KW - business model
KW - interoperability
KW - added value service
KW - Added Value Services
KW - Business Models
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84911422030&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/EVS.2013.6914936
DO - 10.1109/EVS.2013.6914936
M3 - Conference contribution
T3 - 2013 World Electric Vehicle Symposium and Exhibition, EVS 2014
BT - unknown
PB - IEEE
T2 - 27th World Electric Vehicle Symposium and Exhibition, EVS 2014
Y2 - 17 November 2013 through 20 November 2013
ER -