The peer-to-peer energy trading platform is the result of a partnership between Power Ledger and BCPG.
Australia-based blockchain energy company Power Ledger[1] has partnered with Thai renewable energy firm BCPG[2] to launch a trial peer-to-peer energy sharing program in Bangkok, Thailand, according to an August 21 Medium[3] post.
To facilitate energy trading, BCPG will be responsible for designing and installing connections, meters, and solar panels, while Power Ledger will provide its "blockchain technology as the transactive layer across 18-meter points to monitor energy transactions between participants, enable P2P trading, generate invoicing, and evaluate the trading position of individual participants."
In the trial, the Power Ledger blockchain platform will reportedly allow 635KW of solar energy provided by BCPG to be traded among four participating entities in T77, an upscale urban precinct in Bangkok: the Habito shopping mall, Bangkok International Preparatory & Secondary School, Park Court Serviced Apartments, and Dental Hospital Bangkok.
The program is intended to show how blockchain technology can create efficient energy trading to lower energy costs for consumers "by allowing generating customers to monetize excess energy generation through selling energy to third parties."
Pending successful completion, Power Ledger and BCPG hope to use the platform for 31 other prospective projects and increase the power generation to 2MW over a three-year period.
"This trial will showcase how our world-leading blockchain technology can provide secure, trustless and immutable transactions of renewable energy between participants," said David Martin, the managing director at Power Ledger.
In a reported first, the Metropolitan Electricity Authority (MEA), will allow access to its network to facilitate the physical moving of energy and use metering data from the new platform for customer billing.
"Having a utility allow the physical transaction of energy inside the