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Nissan & E.ON Partner On Large UK Vehicle-To-Grid Project

Nissan has been partnering with a variety of players for years on vehicle-to-grid pilot projects.There are a variety of different ways that you can use the vehicle-to-grid (V2G) connection, but they mostly involve EVs taking electricity when its in low demand (charging at those times) and sending it back to the grid at times of high electricity demand.

A new partnership between Nissan, E.ON, Newcastle University, Imperial College London, Northern Powergrid, UK Power Networks, and National Grid ESO — with Nissan and E.ON forming the core of the partnership. The consortium is named e4Future. (Nissan and E.ON partnered a couple of years ago on a V2G project in Denmark.)

So far, Nissan and E.ON have deployed 20 V2G chargers to get a sense for how fleets of electric cars and vans could support the UK electricity grid in a financially sensible way for both those business fleets and the grid.

Electricity from the batteries in these electric vehicles can be sent back to the grid when electricity demand is high. When electricity demand is low and/or renewable energy supply is high, they can buy back that electricity at a cheaper price.

There may be further options for customers to make money via the technology as well, which UK Power Networks is helping to look into. Perhaps some form of gamification will be involved.

These initial 20 chargers are at Nissan’s European Technical Centre in Cranfield, but the plan is to now expand to organizations across the UK to do the same.

While there have been many V2G pilot projects over the years, this project is aimed at genuinely becoming a commercial offering.

“Now that we’ve proven the technology’s capabilities with these 20 installs, we’re a step closer to bringing it to market. This is about commercialising a vehicle’s bi-directional charging capabilities, with clear advantages for businesses either already with a fleet of electric vehicles or those that are ready to make the transition to electric, and demonstrates how E.ON is providing solutions for customers that will help make the air cleaner,” Luke Ellis, V2G Programme Manager with E.ON UK, said.

This pilot project is being partially funded by Innovate UK, which is heavily subsidizing the V2G package for organizations participating in the trial.

It is also receiving funding from the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy, and the Office for Low Emission Vehicles (OLEV).