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Hans De Keulenaer

Life with My PG&E Smart Meter after One Year « Zap! Crackle! Pop! - 0 views

  • My Smart Meter is Irrelevant!  The surprising lesson in all of this is that my smart meter has almost nothing to do with any of these lessons.  The data I rely upon was available before my smart meter was installed and the monthly summaries are still the most useful data available for my purposes.  So where is the consumer benefit from smart meters?  As far as I can tell all the benefits are flowing to PG&E, but my rates are still going up.
Colin Bennett

European smart grid essential to boosting renewables - 0 views

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    A high level Technical University of Denmark has concluded that the fastest way to a low-carbon energy system is an interconnected smart power grid for Europe.
Colin Bennett

Privacy and the emerging smart grid: lessons from the Internet - 2 views

  • “Electric utilities and other providers may have access to information about what customers are using, when they are using it, and what devices are involved. An electricity usage profile could become a source of behavioural information on a granular level,” according to the report,
Colin Bennett

Smart grid could cut US emissions by 12% - 0 views

  • Deploying a smart electricity grid across the board in the US could reduce usage and cut emissions by at least 12% by 2030, according to a new report.
Colin Bennett

EcoGeek - Technology for the Environment - 0 views

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    seems like just yesterday I was talking about smart grid stuff. There's more news: Tendril Networks, a smart grid start-up, has announced all the goods on its networked in-home energy display, called Tendril Residential Energy Ecosystem (TREE).
Colin Bennett

Mitsubishi Investing $75.6 Million to Test Smart Grid Technologies - 2 views

  • Mitsubishi Electric Corporation recently announced that it will invest a total of 7 billion yen ($75.61 million) by March 2012 in a project to build facilities within the company's production sites in Japan for experiments designed to establish advanced smart grid technologies. The project will contribute to the company’s efforts to support the adoption of sustainable power supplies worldwide.
Colin Bennett

US smart grid moves a step closer - 0 views

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    Plans for a US smart grid moved a step closer with the announcement by Commerce Secretary Gary Locke and Energy Secretary Steven Chu of the first set of standards required for its interoperability and security.
Hans De Keulenaer

IBM to prime pump for smart-grid start-ups | Green Tech - CNET News.com - 0 views

  • The idea is to create a common set of communication protocols and data formats that utilities and smart-grid start-ups can adhere to.
  • The benefit of a more intelligent infrastructure is that load can be curtailed as needed and problems spotted more quickly. By flattening out spikes in demand, utilities may not need to build new power plants, which are expensive and opposed in some places for environmental and health reasons.
Colin Bennett

Report: Smart Grid Energy Storage Market to Reach $8.3 Billion by 2016 - 0 views

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    The market for battery and supercapacitor storage systems for Smart Grid applications will grow from $1.5 billion in 2012 to $8.3 billion in 2016, according to a new report from industry analyst firm NanoMarkets.
Colin Bennett

Google Taking a Step Into Smart Meter Monitoring - 0 views

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    Google's tail won't wag the dog. Big players already control the smart grid and its already-open standards. Google's SmartMeter is likely to remain more of a novelty than a game-changer.
Hans De Keulenaer

The Energy Roadmap - The future of electricity: A guide to the Smart Grid - 0 views

  • The world runs on electricity. Demand for electron power in emerging economies is often 3-4 times greater than demand for oil. Because the old model of the electricity grid does not seem adequate in meeting the new demands of the 21st century, many energy pundits argue that access to electricity is the world’s biggest strategic energy issue.
Colin Bennett

Smart Plugs (TalkingPlugs) for Your Home - 1 views

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    "Google's PowerMeter can monitor home energy usage in great detail as well but it generally requires that an electrician install a smart meter or a home energy display. LaMonica reported a couple months ago that IBM and the utility company Consert have been working together on a smart grid program where major appliances can be hooked up to controllers and can communicate with a meter in much the same way as these TalkingPlugs do. With this system, a person can view the data and even control appliances on the web as well. The end use is much the same as these TalkingPlugs."
Colin Bennett

100 million European households will have smart meters by 2014 - 0 views

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    According to a new research report from the analyst firm Berg Insight, the installed base of smart electricity meters in Europe will grow at a compound annual growth rate of 16.2 percent between 2008 and 2014 to reach 96.3 million at the end of the period.
Hans De Keulenaer

Energy Harvesting the Next Big Thing for the Smart Grid | The Energy Collective - 0 views

  • Solar panels capture energy from light and convert it to electricity.   This is the most visible form of energy harvesting, but it is hardly the only one.  Energy harvesting captures energy lost as heat, light, sound, vibration, or movement.  Devices that harvest or scavenge energy can capture, accumulate, store, condition, and manage this energy into electricity for consumption.  That’s important, because our existing electricity infrastructure is extremely wasteful in its use of energy.  For instance, today’s technologies used in electricity generation are not energy efficient.  Traditional gas or steam-powered turbines convert heat to mechanical energy, which is then converted to electricity.  Up to two thirds of that energy input is lost as heat.  Those old incandescent bulbs (technology invented by Thomas Edison in 1879) were real energy losers too.  Ninety percent of the electricity flowing into incandescent bulbs ends up as waste heat. That’s lost energy, which is why smart federal legislation banned incandescents in favor of more energy efficient sources of lighting starting in 2012.
Colin Bennett

Whirlpool to produce one million smart driers - 0 views

  • US appliance manufacturer Whirlpool Corporation has announced that it plans to produce one million smart grid compatible clothes driers by the end of 2011.
Hans De Keulenaer

Virtual Power Plants Set To Potentially Change Power Structure | Renewable Energy News ... - 2 views

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    Will the IT sector deliver the smart grid?
Hans De Keulenaer

News & Events | Michigan Memorial Phoenix Energy Institute - 0 views

  • Scientists at the University of Michigan, using a $2 million grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF), are exploring plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEV) that not only use grid electricity to meet their power needs, but return it to the grid, earning money for the owner.
Hans De Keulenaer

IEEE Spectrum: Can plug-in hybrid electric vehicles keep the electric grid stable? - 0 views

  • After safety, the longevity of the batteries in a plug-in hybrid is the greatest unknown. Can a plug-in hybrid’s battery pack retain the bulk of its energy capacity over 10 years of daily use and more than 4000 full-discharge cycles? (For a deeper look at the challenges facing plug-in hybrid batteries, see “Lithium Batteries Take to the Road”.)[ LINK: http://www.spectrum.ieee.org/sep07/5490 ] As Don Hillebrand of Argonne National Laboratory, in Illinois, said tartly, “Batteries are the showstopper.” Periodic demands from the grid, even for only a small fraction of the battery’s stored energy, would clearly affect the cells’ life span—but no one has data on how much. Another open issue is the development of creative financing models for replacement battery packs costing several thousand U.S. dollars even after mass production is achieved. Third-party battery leasing could be one answer, if combined with a secondary market for batteries whose performance has fallen below automotive levels. Carmakers, electric utilities, and large consumer-financing groups are quietly batting around these notions to see if they can build a financial model that makes sense for all three parties.
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