CEN/WS 073 - Eco-efficient Substations
Eco-efficient Substations
General Information
Frequently Asked Questions
CEN/WS 073 is a Technical Committee within the European Committee for Standardization (CEN). It is named "Eco-efficient Substations". This committee has published 2 standards.
CEN/WS 073 develops CEN standards in the area of Information technology. Currently, there are 2 published standards from this technical committee.
The European Committee for Standardization (CEN) is a public standards organization that brings together the national standardization bodies of 34 European countries. CEN provides a platform for developing European Standards (ENs) and other technical documents in relation to various products, materials, services, and processes, supporting the European Single Market.
A Technical Committee (TC) in CEN is a group of experts responsible for developing international standards in a specific technical area. TCs are composed of national member body delegates and work through consensus to create standards that meet global industry needs. Each TC may have subcommittees (SCs) and working groups (WGs) for specialized topics.
Corr = CCMC origin - messed up drawings 2 & 3
- Corrigendum3 pagesEnglish languagee-Library read for1 day
- Corrigendum3 pagesEnglish languagee-Library read for1 day
The target is to describe what is an eco-efficient substation (EES), how this eco-efficient substation is considered, tested and certified. EES concept includes as much substation efficient design as possible, without trying to cover an exhaustive point of view. The scope of the EES is to focus on a reachable future, realistic compliance with the existing system and ways of handling substation issues in a harmonized manner across Europe.
The proposed standard is compliable with the expected development in Europe in the future such as:
• New buildings with less demand for energy and more demands for lower temperatures.
• The connection systems should be standardized in order to make the substation replacement as easy as possible.
The aim is to consider the whole life of the system, including all seasons and not only the peak load operation. The most important period to consider, is the long duration time with both heating and domestic hot water demands.
EES should be certified, and marked according to certification that is given according to testing result and environmental ranking. Only EES with capacity up to 500kW per heat exchanger for heating and domestic hot water respectively, can be certified. Small substations intended for single-family houses or flats, shall not be certified. A certificate can include one specific substation or a series of substations.
This document contains 3 main parts:
Technical: Describes the main and optional components of the EES
Environmental: Describes the various parameter and components that give the efficiency to the substation, how these are ranked and the marking procedure
Testing and certification: The testing and certification procedures.
- Standardization document47 pagesEnglish languagee-Library read for1 day
- Technical report47 pagesEnglish languagee-Library read for1 day