While this earth2tech article focuses most of its attention on the wireless options and plans being considered by San Diego Gas & Electric, it's the number of smart meters they plan to install over the next 2 years that caught my eye:
1.4 million
Pilots need to get larger, there's no doubt about it. But that's a lot of money in devices and installation services fees. And a heck of a lot of dough down the drain if the technology choices are found less than prescient a few years down the road. Here's the whole piece.
Showing posts with label pilots. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pilots. Show all posts
Monday, August 17, 2009
Tuesday, July 7, 2009
Austin's Amazing, Ambitious Pecan Street Project
In addition to its well deserved reputation as a mecca for technology and live music, Austin is a Smart Grid development hot bed, not doubt about it. Code named (non threateningly enough) after a street named after a nut, the Pecan Street Project is going to be fun to watch. It begins in a city that's already miles ahead of the competition, with intelligent meters deployed in large numbers since 2003. In case you're wondering, that's long before the term Smart Grid ever rolled off anyone's lips.
It's all captured simply in the project's four stated initiatives:
Photo: Wikimedia Commons
It's all captured simply in the project's four stated initiatives:
- Austin will develop a clean energy public/private research and development consortium. Its mission will be to research and develop clean energy technologies and distributed generation systems on Austin’s grid.
- The consortium will create an economically sustainable distributed generation system. Unlike any other “smart grid” project in America, the Pecan Street Project intends to develop a new distributed generation system that integrates clean energy into an economically sustainable business model. The Pecan Street Project will provide the consortium with access to Austin’s grid to test and develop this new system.
- Austin Energy will open its grid to entrepreneurs and researchers to test prototype technologies in the real world. We aren’t just going to build a lab – the City of Austin will be the lab.
- We will implement this model locally and system-wide. Once the consortium creates the new distributed generation system, Austin will show the world how it works. We will do that by using this system to develop the locally produced clean energy equivalent of a new power plant.
Photo: Wikimedia Commons
Labels:
pilots
Tuesday, June 2, 2009
Smart Grids Growing in Colorado
I'm sure you've heard of "Smart Grid City" by now; it's being built by Xcel Energy in Boulder. But that's just the tip of the mountain. Informed sources have told me of work underway up in Fort Collins at CSU (aka FortZED ), at the Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, and elsewhere. Will keep you posted as more info rolls in from the Front Range.
Labels:
pilots
Thursday, May 14, 2009
Palo Alto Looks Before it Leaps ... in to Smart Grid
While other towns install first and ask questions later, EPRI's Don Von Dollen advises Palo Alto to think, plan, then act:
Wait for the activity at the state and federal levels to settle down. Wait for the dust to settle. Wait and see what vendor products still are around before you start making any decisions too quickly.Does this sound crazy? I don't think so. Palo Alto is following Von Dollen's advise. Here's the full story.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
