REACT project overview…

Mitsubishi Electric Corporation’s European subsidiary Mitsubishi Electric R&D Centre Europe B.V. has started a demonstration experiment on May 25 in the Irish Aran Islands to evaluate ‘the effectiveness of heat pump control for demand response’ as part of the REACT project to demonstrate energy independence for remote islands. The project, which is co-funded by the European Union Horizon 2020 programme, will use heat pump systems deployed at the Aran Islands in Ireland, and San Pietro Island in Italy.

Renewable energy sources, such as PhotoVoltaic (PV) panels and wind turbines, are important technologies for tackling climate change because they do not emit CO2 when generating electricity. Remote islands face geographical and structural challenges due to their high dependence on fossil fuels and energy supplies from the mainland. The REACT islands are expected to make maximum use of renewable energy to achieve an increased level of energy independence.

REACT is an Innovation Action project involving 22 partners including companies and academic institutions from 11 EU countries. The project will demonstrate a community-centric approach to energy management for remote islands using distributed renewable energy generation and storage technologies with demand-response to balance power supply and demand. The project aims to achieve energy savings of 10%, a 60% reduction in greenhouse gases, and a 50% increase in the use of renewable energy, compared to a baseline operation case before the application of the REACT solution.

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