
The Value of "Vehicle to Grid" Integration into Warehouse Logistics Management - Case of Slovenian Retailer
Author(s) -
Matjaž Knez,
Péter Bajor
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
organizacija
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.398
H-Index - 8
eISSN - 1581-1832
pISSN - 1318-5454
DOI - 10.2478/v10051-011-0017-6
Subject(s) - grid , warehouse , renewable energy , electricity , business , energy storage , photovoltaic system , computer science , production (economics) , environmental economics , operations management , marketing , power (physics) , electrical engineering , engineering , economics , physics , geometry , mathematics , quantum mechanics , macroeconomics
Wide-scale application photovoltaic energy sources for electricity production purposes is quite a challenge in Slovenia. The nature of sun is unpredictable, and the Slovenian National Grid has no significant storage opportunities today - if the V2G (vehicle-to-grid) solutions could be competitive in the near future we could prepare for the special circumstances: the batteries of electrically driven forklifts could provide attractive storage functions for renewable electricity storage. The following paper presents an overview of some "environmental background approaches" to show the complexity of this innovative system and to show the value of V2G technology and its application in warehouse logistics.Aplikacija fotovoltaike za namene proizvodnje električne energije predstavlja za Slovenijo zelo velik izziv. Sonce kot vir energije je zelo nepredvidljiv, slovensko električno omrežje pa nima večjih možnosti shranjevanja električne energije. Z integracijo tehnološkega koncepta V2G (ang. Vehicle to Gridslov. Vozilo na Omrežje), bi baterije električnih viličarjev lahko uporabili za shranjevanje energije proizvedene iz sončne energije tar tako povečali zanesljivost elektroenergetskega sistema. Članek predstavlja tehnološki koncept V2G, njegovo kompleksnost in inovativnost ter možnost integracije v skladiščni energetski management