Introduction

The sea change in the Electric Power industry is posing many new challenges to green software engineering. The disruptive developments in smart grid distributed energy generation and distribution, the rapid growth and viability of renewable energies, the rise of “energy communities”, the proliferation of demand response-enabled smart appliances/ devices and the threat from new battery technologies (e.g. graphene) all contribute to force energy utilities out of their “natural monopoly” status. The future of utilities is now seen to be in Transactive Energy: market-based transaction-oriented exchanges between energy producers, prosumer and consumers, with economic and control mechanisms that allow the dynamic balance of supply and demand across the entire electrical infrastructure using value as a key operational parameter. Existing utility control systems are not able to manage the physical infrastructure being added to the grid (e.g., solar panels, wind turbines, customer-owned microgrid systems, smart devices, etc.), let alone dictate realtime market exchanges. To survive, the utilities must change their business models and rethink their role in the value proposition, moving from an electricity supplier (i.e., a goods-dominant perspective) to a smart service provider in the new Transactive Energy ecosystem (i.e., a service-dominant perspective). This talk will provide a state of the art overview of the challenges, paradigm shifts required, and future directions for engineering for Transitive Energy systems. A promising Eco-architecture approach will be discussed based on an empirical case study with a large IT service consulting firm.

The GREENS workshop series brings together researchers and practitioners to discuss both the state-of-the-art and state-of-the-practice in green software, including novel ideas, research challenges, methods, experiences, and tools to support the engineering of sustainable and energy efficient software systems.

Call for paper

Important date

2016-01-22
Draft paper submission deadline
2016-02-19
Draft paper acceptance notification
2016-02-26
Final paper submission deadline

Submission Topics

GREENS 2016 encourages contributions from industry, government, and academia on all topics related to greener software engineering. Topics include, but are not limited to:

  • Requirements and design methods for green software

  • Best practices to increase energy efficiency and sustainability (including software and process improvement)

  • Instrument and monitor software systems to key green indicators (KGIs) and green improvement

  • Energy-aware adaptation of software-intensive systems

  • Energy challenges and solutions in cyber physical systems

  • Energy efficient IoT and sensor networks

  • Self-adaptive and self-managing systems for green computing

  • Green architectural knowledge, green design patterns

  • Sustainable data management

  • Monitoring, verification and validation of green software

  • Creating user awareness about energy consumption

  • Analytics tools for green decision making

  • Green key performance indicators

  • Quality & risk assessments, tradeoff analyses between energy efficiency, sustainability and traditional quality requirements

  • Business models for green software (e.g., SaaS, IaaS, PaaS, and cloud computing)

  • Formulating challenges for a green software industry

  • Return on investments and economic aspects of green software development

  • Case studies and industry experience reports

  • Incentives to invest in greener software

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Important Date
  • May 16

    2016

    Conference Date

  • Jan 22 2016

    Draft paper submission deadline

  • Feb 19 2016

    Draft Paper Acceptance Notification

  • Feb 26 2016

    Final Paper Deadline

  • May 16 2016

    Registration deadline

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IEEE
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