Designing Active Operation in Low-Voltage Distribution Grids: Requirements, Interfaces and Roadmap
Pith reviewed 2026-05-09 23:54 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Active low-voltage grid operation rests on three regulatory pillars of observability, secure communication, and integrated optimization, implemented through a four-phase roadmap.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Active operation of low-voltage grids becomes feasible when distribution system operators combine measurement placement for observability, secure interoperable communication architectures, and the integration of market-based flexibility procurement with grid-oriented optimisation, all sequenced by a four-phase roadmap that moves from requirements definition to system-level rollout.
What carries the argument
The three pillars (measurement placement and observability, secure interoperable ICT architectures and interfaces, integration of market-based and grid-oriented optimisation) together with the four-phase roadmap that structures their development and deployment.
If this is right
- Distribution operators gain a system overview that names the main actors and data flows needed for coordinated control.
- Research priorities can be aligned across the three pillars to develop the missing methods and interfaces.
- Validation moves in ordered stages from simulation to laboratory tests to field deployment and back to system feedback.
- The roadmap supplies a concrete sequence that regulators and operators can follow when turning recent directives into daily practice.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- Successful rollout would allow higher shares of distributed renewables without excessive curtailment by using local flexibility more precisely.
- The same structure could be adapted to other European countries once their national rules align with the underlying directives.
- Over time the integrated optimisation layer might create new settlement mechanisms between market platforms and grid operators.
Load-bearing premise
The three pillars plus the four-phase roadmap will prove sufficient and workable for distribution system operators once the cited regulations take effect in practice.
What would settle it
A field trial in which the three pillars are implemented according to the roadmap yet grid stability or flexibility procurement still fails to meet regulatory or operational targets.
read the original abstract
This paper outlines a pathway towards active operation of lowvoltage distribution grids. In these grids, the growing deployment of distributed generation, controllable demand and storage, together with the roll-out of intelligent metering systems, creates new requirements and opportunities for distribution system operators. On the basis of the German and European regulation, and in particular of recent directives enabling grid-oriented interventions and market-based procurement of flexibility, the paper identifies three key pillars for active low-voltage operation: (a) measurement placement and observability, (b) secure and interoperable information and communication architectures and interfaces, and (c) integration of market-based and gridoriented optimisation for controlling connected assets. A structured system overview is developed that specifies main actors and data flows, highlighting central research topics across these pillars. Building on this, a four-phase roadmap is presented, spanning requirements and use-case definition, method development and simulation, laboratory and field validation, and roll-out with system-level feedback, thus providing guidance for distribution system operators and researchers.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. This paper outlines a pathway for active operation of low-voltage distribution grids. Drawing from German and European regulations on grid-oriented interventions and market-based flexibility procurement, it identifies three pillars: (a) measurement placement and observability, (b) secure and interoperable ICT architectures and interfaces, and (c) integration of market-based and grid-oriented optimisation. A system overview of actors and data flows is developed, along with a four-phase roadmap spanning requirements definition, method development, validation, and roll-out.
Significance. If the proposed framework holds, the paper provides a valuable synthesis that structures the complex regulatory and technical requirements for active low-voltage grid operation. It explicitly links recent directives to practical pillars and offers a phased development path, which can serve as a reference for DSOs and researchers. The strength lies in its holistic approach covering measurement, communication, and optimization aspects without introducing unsubstantiated quantitative claims.
major comments (1)
- [the four-phase roadmap] The four-phase roadmap: the description does not specify measurable criteria, milestones, or key performance indicators for advancing between phases (e.g., required observability levels before entering laboratory validation), which is load-bearing for the claim that the roadmap offers implementable guidance to distribution system operators.
minor comments (3)
- All acronyms and technical terms (e.g., DSO, DER, LV, ICT) should be defined on first use to improve readability for a broad audience.
- The structured system overview would be clearer if accompanied by a diagram illustrating the main actors and data flows between the three pillars.
- Specific German and EU directives referenced in the text could be compiled into a table or appendix for easier cross-referencing.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the constructive and positive assessment of the manuscript, including the recommendation for minor revision. We address the major comment on the four-phase roadmap below.
read point-by-point responses
-
Referee: The four-phase roadmap: the description does not specify measurable criteria, milestones, or key performance indicators for advancing between phases (e.g., required observability levels before entering laboratory validation), which is load-bearing for the claim that the roadmap offers implementable guidance to distribution system operators.
Authors: We agree that the manuscript's description of the four-phase roadmap remains at a conceptual level and does not provide explicit, quantitative criteria or KPIs for phase transitions. This reflects the paper's scope as a high-level synthesis applicable across diverse regulatory environments and DSO contexts, where specific thresholds (such as observability levels or interoperability compliance) must be defined locally during the requirements phase. To improve practical utility, we will revise the roadmap section to include illustrative examples of potential milestones and transition criteria drawn from the three pillars, while explicitly stating that these are not prescriptive and that detailed, measurable KPIs should be established on a case-by-case basis. This revision will strengthen the guidance claim without altering the paper's overall framework or introducing unsubstantiated quantitative assertions. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity: external regulatory synthesis
full rationale
The paper's derivation consists of identifying three pillars (measurement/observability, ICT architectures, market-grid optimization) and a four-phase roadmap directly from cited German/EU directives and standard power-system practices. No equations, fitted parameters, predictions, or self-referential definitions appear; the central claim is a high-level framework synthesized from external sources rather than reduced to internal inputs by construction. This is a standard non-circular regulatory overview.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption Recent directives enable grid-oriented interventions and market-based procurement of flexibility for distribution system operators.
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
-
[1]
GermanFederalMinistryofEconomicAffairsandEnergy (BMWE), “Energy Industry Act (EnWG),” 2005
work page 2005
-
[2]
Decision BK6-22- 300: AdjustmentoftheRevenueCapforElectricityDistri- bution System Operators,
Federal Network Agency (BNetzA), “Decision BK6-22- 300: AdjustmentoftheRevenueCapforElectricityDistri- bution System Operators,” Bundesnetzagentur (BNetzA), Bonn, Germany, Tech. Rep. BK6-22-300, 2023
work page 2023
-
[3]
TheFuture of Section 14a EnWG: A Roadmap towards Active Oper- ation of Low-Voltage Grids,
J.Heid,E.Tönges,S.Wende-vonBergetal.,“TheFuture of Section 14a EnWG: A Roadmap towards Active Oper- ation of Low-Voltage Grids,” Fraunhofer CINES, White paper, 2025
work page 2025
-
[4]
Decision BK8-22- 010: Network Charges for Controllable Connections and Consumer Equipment,
Federal Network Agency (BNetzA), “Decision BK8-22- 010: Network Charges for Controllable Connections and Consumer Equipment,” Bundesnetzagentur (BNetzA), Bonn, Germany, Tech. Rep. BK8-22-010, 2023
work page 2023
-
[5]
Impulse for Controlling Generation Systems in Low-Voltage Networks,
VDE FNN, “Impulse for Controlling Generation Systems in Low-Voltage Networks,” VDE FNN, Berlin, Germany, Tech. Rep., 2024
work page 2024
-
[6]
Technicalconnectionrulesforthelow-voltagenet- work(VDE-AR-N4100andVDE-AR-N4105),
——,“Technicalconnectionrulesforthelow-voltagenet- work(VDE-AR-N4100andVDE-AR-N4105),”Verband der Elektrotechnik Elektronik Informationstechnik e.V. (VDE),Berlin,Germany,Tech.Rep.,2018/2019,compre- hensive framework for connection and operation of loads and generators in German low-voltage grids
work page 2018
-
[7]
RenewableEnergySourcesAct(EEG),
GermanFederalMinistryofEconomicAffairsandEnergy (BMWE),“RenewableEnergySourcesAct(EEG),”2023
work page 2023
-
[8]
Decision BK6-20- 059 on the Determination of Conditions for Redispatch,
Federal Network Agency (BNetzA), “Decision BK6-20- 059 on the Determination of Conditions for Redispatch,” Bundesnetzagentur(BNetzA),Bonn,Germany,Tech.Rep. BK6-20-059, 2020
work page 2020
-
[9]
VDE,VDE SPEC 90032: Redispatch 3.0 – Architecture and Processes for Congestion Management in Distribu- tion Systems with Assets below 100 kW, VDE Association for Electrical, Electronic and Information Technologies, Frankfurt am Main, Germany, 2025
work page 2025
-
[10]
(2026) Manufacturing-X: Project Dataflex
Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and En- ergy (BMWE). (2026) Manufacturing-X: Project Dataflex. In German. [Online]. Available: https: //www.bundeswirtschaftsministerium.de/Redaktion/DE/ Dossier/Manufacturing-x/Module/projekt-dataflex.html
work page 2026
-
[11]
Directive (EU) 2019/944 on Common Rules for the In- ternal Market for Electricity,
EuropeanParliamentandCounciloftheEuropeanUnion, “Directive (EU) 2019/944 on Common Rules for the In- ternal Market for Electricity,” 2019
work page 2019
-
[12]
Act on the Operation of Metering Points (MsbG),
German Federal Ministry of Economic Affairs and En- ergy (BMWE), “Act on the Operation of Metering Points (MsbG),” 2016
work page 2016
-
[13]
Protec- tion Profile for the Gateway of a Smart Metering System (Smart-Meter-Gateway PP),
Federal Office for Information Security (BSI), “Protec- tion Profile for the Gateway of a Smart Metering System (Smart-Meter-Gateway PP),” Federal Office for Informa- tion Security (BSI), Tech. Rep., 2024
work page 2024
-
[14]
——, “Technical Guideline BSI TR-03109: Technical Communication Infrastructure for Intelligent Metering Systems,” Federal Office for Information Security (BSI), Tech. Rep., 2024
work page 2024
-
[15]
Directive(EU)2022/2555onMeasuresforaHighCom- mon Level of Cybersecurity Across the Union (NIS2),
EuropeanParliamentandCounciloftheEuropeanUnion, “Directive(EU)2022/2555onMeasuresforaHighCom- mon Level of Cybersecurity Across the Union (NIS2),” 2022
work page 2022
-
[16]
ActReformingtheBSIActandImplementingthe NIS2 Directive (NIS2UmsuCG),
German Federal Ministry of the Interior and Community (BMI),“ActReformingtheBSIActandImplementingthe NIS2 Directive (NIS2UmsuCG),” 2024
work page 2024
-
[17]
Regulation (EU) 2024/1689 on Har- monised Rules on Artificial Intelligence (AI Act),
European Union, “Regulation (EU) 2024/1689 on Har- monised Rules on Artificial Intelligence (AI Act),” 2024
work page 2024
-
[18]
Energiewende. Effizient. Machen. Mon- itoring Report for the 21st Legislative Period,
EWI and BET, “Energiewende. Effizient. Machen. Mon- itoring Report for the 21st Legislative Period,” EWI and BET, Cologne/Aachen, Germany, Tech. Rep., 2025
work page 2025
-
[19]
Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy (BMWE), “Ten Key Measures Regarding the Monitor- ing Report: Becoming Climate Neutral while Remaining Competitive,” Berlin, Germany, 2025
work page 2025
-
[20]
A. Schoen, J. Ringelstein, D. Mendeet al., “Prototyping ControlStrategiesforProsumers: AFrameworkforStrat- egy Development and Analysis in Low-Voltage Grids,” in Proc. IEEE PowerTech. IEEE, 2025, pp. 1–6
work page 2025
-
[21]
W. Zeng, J. von Appen, P. Selzamet al., “Active Resi- dential Load Management based on Dynamic Real-Time Electricity Price of Carbon Emission,”Energy Procedia, vol. 152, pp. 1027–1032, 2018
work page 2018
-
[22]
K. Jurczyk, L. Riedl, M. Dippet al., “Comparing the Im- pact of AI-Based versus Standard Load Profiles in ANN State Estimation Training in a Real Distribution Grid,” in Proc. Int. Conf. Smart Energy Systems and Technologies (SEST). IEEE, 2024, pp. 1–6
work page 2024
-
[23]
Wls-basedstateestimationfor unobservable distribution grids through allocation factors evaluation,
M.PauandP.A.Pegoraro,“Wls-basedstateestimationfor unobservable distribution grids through allocation factors evaluation,”IEEE Transactions on Instrumentation and Measurement, vol. 73, pp. 1–13, 2024
work page 2024
-
[24]
FhGenie: A Cus- tom,Confidentiality-preservingChatAIforCorporateand Scientific Use,
I. Weber, H. Linka, D. Mertenset al., “FhGenie: A Cus- tom,Confidentiality-preservingChatAIforCorporateand Scientific Use,” 2024. 5
work page 2024
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.