Visit the International Energy Agency Implementing Agreement for a Co-operative Programme on Smart Grids website.
The International Smart Grid Action Network (ISGAN) creates a mechanism through which multinational stakeholders can collaborate on accelerating the development and deployment of smarter electric grids around the world. ISGAN promotes a dynamic exchange of knowledge and best practices, tool development, and project coordination. It aims to improve the understanding and adoption of smart grid technologies, practices, and systems and related government policies.
ISGAN activities center on those aspects of the smart grid where governments have regulatory authority, expertise, convening power, or other leverage, focusing on five principal areas:
For more information, view the ISGAN fact sheet.
Smart grid represents a novel convergence of several different groups of technologies—traditional power sector transmission and distribution technologies, information and communication technologies, advanced power electronics and control devices, sensing and monitoring equipment, and cybersecurity systems—as well as the operational practices that integrate these technologies into unified systems. ISGAN's purpose is to help countries accelerate progress to their national-level smart grid goals and to facilitate their adoption of more ambitious targets.
Countries bring a diversity of drivers and approaches to the smart grid space, including integrating renewable energy, both transmission-scale and distributed; integrating plug-in electric vehicles; improving operational efficiency and system reliability; improving electricity market function; reducing losses; and differentiating electricity services for consumers.
Because of the diversity of drivers and technologies captured in the term "smart grid," it is difficult to identify a single, unified goal or metric that can capture the state of smart grid progress. (The United States alone tracks 21 key metrics in its biannual Smart Grid System Report.)
Through ISGAN’s projects, its participants hope to improve the understanding of these drivers and their implications on smart grid development and deployment, in an effort to identify an appropriate basket of metrics and corresponding tools for measuring progress internationally.