The electricity we use creates different levels of CO2 emissions at different times of the day and night. This depends on how much regionally and regeneratively produced electricity is actually flowing in the grid and how high city-wide consumption is.
For example, if the grid is currently being supplied with a lot of wind energy from northern Germany, solar energy from the south or energy produced by individual households, the current, real CO2 emissions will decrease. Wuppertal’s public utilities have been calculating the actual hourly CO2 emissions behind the electricity we consume for several years.
In collaboration with the Bergische University and the Arrenberg Climate District, these were transferred to grids and the “energy weather” concept was developed and made visible. It divides CO2 emissions into three levels and shows them in red, yellow and green to indicate whether they are currently high or low and how they are likely to evolve in the coming hours and days.
So you can reschedule your usage instead of cutting down. Use existing devices instead of always buying new ones. These are ways in which every household can contribute to the energy transition and climate protection, regardless of financial resources. It won’t solve all our problems, but it’s a smart step that everyone can take.
"Gemeinsam machen wir Wuppertal smart" lautet das Motto einer ganzen Reihe von Workshops, zu denen die Stadt ab dem 11. Mai einlädt. In den Workshops sollen sich alle Interessierten mit ihren Ideen, Vorschlägen und Wünschen für Smart City Wuppertal einbringen können. Dabei geht es um Themen wie smarte Verwaltung, den Nutzen digitaler Technologie, smarte Mobilität oder Digitalisierung in den Stadtteilen. Eine Anmeldung zu den Workshops ist nötig unter www.smart.wuppertal.de/workshopreihe.
Das Projekt wird gefördert durch das Bundesministerium für Wohnen, Stadtentwicklung und Bauwesen.
Machen Sie mit, und gestalten Sie smart.wuppertal!