Aggregator
An aggregator is a legal entity that pools the consumption or generation capacity of multiple market participants and offers it to the Transmission System Operator as balancing reserves. Aggregation lets small-scale resources — home batteries, demand response, behind-the-meter solar — qualify for markets whose minimum bid sizes exclude them individually. Volton operates as an aggregator in Estonia.
An aggregator is a legal entity that pools the consumption or generation capacity of multiple market participants and offers it to the Transmission System Operator as balancing reserves or to the wholesale market as a single bidder. The role is recognised in EU law via Directive (EU) 2019/944 — Article 2(18) defines aggregation, Article 2(19) defines the "independent aggregator" as a market participant not affiliated with the customer's supplier.
Why aggregation exists
Most flexibility lives in small assets — home batteries, EV chargers, heat pumps, behind-the-meter solar — that individually fall below the minimum bid sizes of balancing markets. A BESS under 1 MW typically cannot prequalify for mFRR alone. The aggregator pools many such assets into a single virtual unit; the TSO sees one bidder. The economic value is that the aggregator captures returns small assets cannot reach individually.
How an aggregator operates
Three layers: (1) a contractual layer with each participating asset owner, defining what the aggregator can dispatch and the revenue share; (2) a technical layer — telemetry, communication protocols (OCPP for chargers, Modbus for inverters, IEC 61850 for substations) and a real-time control system that issues setpoints to assets in milliseconds when balancing markets activate; (3) a market layer — BSP licensing, BRP balance agreement, bidding strategies across day-ahead, intraday and reserves.
Volton as aggregator
Volton operates as an aggregator in Estonia: it is a registered BSP at Elering, holds a balance agreement (BRP) with the Estonian TSO, and pools customer-owned heat pumps, batteries, EV chargers and floor heating into balancing-reserve and spot-arbitrage portfolios. The retail product, Volton Home, is the customer-facing layer of this aggregation.
Biežāk uzdotie jautājumi
- What is an aggregator in electricity markets?
- An aggregator is a legal entity that pools the consumption or generation capacity of multiple smaller market participants — home batteries, demand response, distributed solar — into a single virtual unit. The TSO sees one bidder; the underlying assets stay distributed. Aggregation lets resources that are individually too small to meet minimum bid thresholds (typically 1 MW on BBCM) participate in balancing and capacity markets.
- How does aggregation work technically?
- The aggregator runs a central control system that dispatches all the underlying assets in real time when an activation order arrives from the TSO. Each asset has sub-minute metering and a communication link to the aggregator; the aggregator has the BSP-grade telemetry link to Elering. When a 5 MW mFRR activation comes in, the aggregator splits it across maybe 200 home batteries, each delivering 25 kW.
- Who can be an aggregator in Estonia?
- Any company that completes BSP prequalification with Elering for the relevant product (FCR, aFRR, mFRR) and has the technical infrastructure to dispatch a distributed portfolio. EU Directive 2019/944 explicitly allows independent aggregators — they don't need to be the customer's electricity supplier. Volton operates as an independent BSP-aggregator in Estonia, primarily on mFRR.
- Is aggregation a regulated business in Estonia?
- Yes. Aggregators must hold BSP certification, meet the same technical requirements as a single-asset operator (response times, metering, financial guarantees), and respect Datahub data-protection rules. The BRP role is separate — many aggregators contract with a larger BRP rather than holding their own balance agreement, because that's a heavier compliance footprint.