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  • VALERE2019 - SSCeGOV

    Project leaders

    University of Campania

    E-government aspires to deliver public services more efficiently, effectively, accessibly by IT advanced methodologies and technologies. However, there are a lot of challenges that needs to be addressed in order to enable a full adoption of state of art solution in public administration.

    SSCeGov Project aims at proposing semantic-based Decision Support System that helps some of the core actors in adoption of such solutions in e-government processes.

    The methodology relies on semantically annotated BPMN (Business Process Model Notation) and on inferential engines to support (i) e-government processes re-engineering and optimization and (ii) e-government validation, taking into account law compliance and risk analysis respect to (cyber-)security issues. The project aims at producing a prototype of the Semantic-based Decision Support System, that will be tested against real-world problems.
    SSCeGov will rely on real-world case studies addressing eGov processes of Campania Regional Government, as stated in the interest letter from Campania Regional Council (Prot. 0004332/u del 05/02/2019).

  • H2020 - GreenCharge

    Project leaders

    SINTEF Norway; University of Campania

    GreenCharge will empower cities and municipalities to make the transition to zero emission/sustainable mobility with innovative business models, technologies and guidelines for cost efficient and successful deployment and operation of charging infrastructure for EVs. Inspired by ideas from sharing economy, the business models will focus on enabling the mutualisation of excess capacity of private RES, private charging facilities and the batteries of parked EVs, leveraging fair gain sharing to ensure sufficient incentives for all stakeholders to participate. The enabling technology will coordinate the power demand of charging with other local demand and availability of local RES, leveraging load flexibility and storage capacity of local stationary batteries and parked EVs. Furthermore, it will provide user friendly charge planning, booking and billing services for EV users. This will reduce the need for grid investments to establish new charging stations, remove range anxiety and enable the sharing of already existing dedicated charging facilities for EV fleets. To implement the technology the project will integrate and extend existing systems. Pilots will be carried out in Barcelona, Bremen and Oslo to demonstrate and evaluate the proposed approach. The pilots will be extended with simulations for exploring more complex scenarios not possible to test in the pilots and to assess scalability. The consortium includes commercial companies (also SMEs) with experience in commercialisation, and ambitious municipalities with significant experience in deploying innovative solutions. The project duration will be 36 months, with a requested funding of 5 M€.

  • FP7 - Collaborating Solar Powered Micro-grids

    Project leaders

    SINTEF Norway; University of Campania

    When considering renewable energy sources, like solar electricity, people often do not directly see the benefit of their investment. While the sun is shining and might be producing electricity in their homes, they are at their work and cannot use that energy directly, while when they need the energy at night (for laundry, lighting, computers) the solar panel is no longer producing. Indeed, research has shown that while in theory houses can be self-reliant on solar panels by the amount of electricity they produce, it would require considerable (and expensive) storage capacity to realize this. With smart management and control systems, different types of buildings (for instance a mix of houses, companies and schools) could be connected in such a way that this neighbourhood would use more, or even most, of its renewable energy within the community. For example, if one neighbour does not use her electric car one day, its battery can be used to store excess energy produced from the solar panels on another neighbour's roof. The CoSSMic project aims to develop the ICT tools needed to facilitate this sharing of renewable energy within a neighbourhood, and will show the feasibility of its concept in two different areas: Konstanz in Germany and the Province of Caserta in Italy. At these trial locations, which are rather different in terms of population, sun, andavailable equipment, CoSSMic will investigate how to motivate people to participate in acquiring (more) renewable energy and the sharing of renewable energy in the neighbourhood, and test methods for making money with these schemes.

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