[Editorial]
Smart Meters Could Revolutionize Summer Living
Mark David
ED Online ID #15916
July 5, 2007
Copyright © 2006 Penton Media, Inc., All rights reserved. Printing of this document is for personal use only.
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It’s summertime, but the living isn’t easy. All the talk about
global climate change— coupled with soaring summer electric rates—is
keeping me from keeping my cool. According to the Edison Electric Institute
(EEI), 60% of a typical summer electric bill is devoted to air conditioning,
and that could jump to 75% based on the weather.
I live in a century home, and I don’t have central air. Between the
attic fan, the dehumidifier in the old stone basement, a couple of room air
conditioners, and the pool pump, my summer bills soar. (I just went to shut
off the pool pump while I’m writing, having just read in an EEI brochure
that the pool pump is the worst kind of electricity hog.) That’s why
the EEI is promoting the “smart” grid concept with advanced meters
and two-way communication capabilities.
PULLING IT TOGETHER
Utilities are taking consumption-management programs like time-of-day pricing
and peak-use control to the next level. Real-time electricity pricing information
is being coupled with automated HVAC and home control technology to give consumers
the ability to schedule and run appliances when power costs are lowest.
This burgeoning “prices to devices” ecosystem creates tremendous
opportunity for electronic designers—for developing meters and smart
thermostats and controllers, and also for the supporting communications systems.
Once the infrastructure is in place, myriad additional appliances can be tied
in to the network: intelligent air conditioners, water heaters, dishwashers,
dryers, washing machines, and, of course, pool pumps!
While California is working toward mandating smart meters via Title 24 initiatives,
local utility companies throughout the nation are in various stages of test
and implementation. Beyond leveling out energy demand, the systems benefit the
utilities by eliminating manual meter readings, providing direct alerts of power
outages, and facilitating broadband-over-powerline.
Pepco Holdings’ SmartPowerDC is a pilot program in the District of Columbia.
Pepco is testing an advanced metering infra- structure while investing in substations
and distribution automation to support the system. Beyond energy savings, said
Pepco’s Mack Wathen, smart metering provides customers more accurate
and timely billing, eliminating estimated bills and attendant customer service
inquiries.
ConEdison has 20,000 homes in the New York metro area participating in a demand-management
program using the Sky-Tel paging infrastructure to remotely control air conditioning
in homes equipped with Carrier’s ComfortChoice two-way communicating
thermostats. As an incentive to participate, consumers get the programmable
Carrier thermostat installed at no charge, along with a cash “signing
bonus” of $25.
Customers can override the automated control when they want. In turn, ConEdison
can, at the press of a button, conserve 27 MW by paging the thermostats at the
participants’ homes and turning off their A/C until demand ebbs.
According to Michael Marks, president of Applied Energy Group (the company
managing the ConEdison program), Sky-Tel views such machine-to-machine communications
as a key to the future for its paging infrastructure, which is otherwise losing
business to text messaging and wireless e-mail alternatives.
STAYING COOL IN CHICAGO
ComEd in Chicago has one of the country’s most advanced metering programs,
with 65,000 customers under remote air-conditioning control. Its Load Guard
program and Web site, wattspot.com,
let customers see real-time electric prices and determine the prices they want
for cycling their air conditioning. They can pick a “green” program
for cycling in lowest demand periods or a “blue” program, which
still offers a discount over flat-rate pricing but has a higher threshold and
more run time.
According to Paul Heitmann of Comverge, the program manager for ComED, ComEd
is looking into the remote control of appliances in the near future, noting
that Comverge has recently joined the ZigBee Alliance. Says Heitmann, “The
question becomes ‘where to stop’ when looking at the potential
for communicating and cycling appliances at off-peak times of day.”
To help speed the development of these smart systems, the electric companies
are supporting the Electric Power Research Institute, a nonprofit center for
public interest energy and environmental research. In fact, the EPRI has opened
the Living Laboratory for Energy Efficiency, a facility to test the performance
and interoperability of smart power-delivery systems and to facilitate “prices
to devices” standards and infrastructures.
Tom Reddoch, manager of the EPRI program, said the Living Lab fills an important
third-party role in evaluating the compatibility of devices and standards. The
lab will determine whether new devices perform as advertised and if they can
be “mixed and matched” in the open ecosystem the utilities need
to create.
Envisioning and engineering this new infrastructure offers an exciting vision
to consider while relaxing poolside this summer. Now if my local electric provider
would offer me a smart meter with real-time, discounted pricing, I might be
able to really enjoy my summer living again.
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