Behind the Meter (BTM) refers to energy generation, storage, or management systems located on the customer’s side of the utility meter. These systems, such as rooftop solar panels, battery storage, or demand response technologies, reduce grid reliance by supplying power directly to the user. BTM solutions help lower electricity costs, improve energy resilience, and support grid stability by reducing peak demand. They play a key role in advancing distributed energy resources and sustainable energy adoption.

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Battery Optimal Approach to Demand Charge Reduction in Behind-The-Meter Energy Management Systems

Large monthly demand charge of commercial and industrial entities is a major problem for their economical business. Utilizing a battery by behind-the-meter Energy Management Systems (EMS) has been seen as a solution to demand charge reduction. In state-of-the-art approaches, the EMS maintains sufficient energy for the unexpected large demands and uses the battery to meet them. However, large amount of energy stored in the battery may increase the average battery State-of-Charge (SoC) and cause degradation in battery capacity. Therefore, the current approaches of demand charge reduction significantly shortens the battery lifetime which is not economical. In this paper, we propose a novel battery optimal approach to reduce the monthly demand charges. In our approach, load profile of the previous month is used by daily optimizations to shave daily power demands while considering the battery lifetime model. Evaluated daily demand thresholds and load profile are statistically analyzed to cluster different types of day. Hence, it helps the EMS to find the typical daily load profile and appropriate monthly demand threshold for the entity. The performance of our approach has been analyzed and compared to the state-of-the-arts by experimenting on multiple real-life load profiles and battery configurations. The results show significant reduction of 16% in annual average battery SoC that increases the battery lifetime from 4.1 to 5.6 years while achieving up to 13.4% demand charge reduction.