Posts Tagged ‘electronic data’
EMIX – an electronic data and messaging service
EMIX (Energimarknadens Informationsväxel i Sverige AB) is an electronic data and messaging service designed for a deregulated market. It is developed to improve the information flow between players on the energy market and it is an outcome from an industry initiative. EMIX is 100% owned subsidiary of the Svensk Energi-Swedenergy AB. It is financed by loans from the industry stakeholders in Sweden.
EMIX has about 135 contacted companies today and 70 of them are put into operation.
The reason for developing this service are many but there have been trouble in past where information wasn’t synchronised between two players, for example metering point ID. There could be lack of information that was crucial for creating a correct bill. One customer could have two suppliers at the same time because the END message (Z05) didn’t reach the player and so on. With EMIX most of these problems will be vanished in the future.
What EMIX does, is to keep track of all Ediel messages that is sent from one player to another. If one player doesn’t follow the rules or industry standards a message will be sent to inform about this. In version 2.0 some messages that doesn’t follow industry standard will be sent back directly from EMIX. In the present version EMIX tells the player what is wrong.
All contracted EMIX players have access to a EMIX portal secured by a VPN tunnel. The portal enables the player to get access to all messages where they are involved. In a later version there will probably also be possible to resend a message from the receiver side. Today it’s only possible to resend from the sender side.
There are several reports that can be written from EMIX that shows how your company is doing.
EMIX is between all contracted players so that when a message is sent EMIX grabs it and saves it to its database. It also sends back a control message to inform the sending part that it has been delivered to EMIX. The original message is sent to its receiver that answers with a control message and after that an APERAK message that is transported all the way to the original sending part. Everything is logged with timestamps.
You can read more about the different scenarios that can occur between players on www.emix.se.
EMIX will enable a gradual transition to an open end-user market in the Nordic region and perhaps even in EU.