11 May 2009
The government has today released its long-anticipated plans for rolling out smart meters to every home and business in the UK with the publication of a new consultation document outlining how energy companies should manage the installation of the technology.
The proposals set a goal of ensuring every home and business in the UK has smart meters installed by 2020, capable of providing real-time, accurate electricity and gas use data that will make it easier for people to reduce the amount of energy they use, switch suppliers, and ultimately take advantage of smart grid technologies.
"Smart meters will empower all consumers to monitor their own energy use and make reductions in energy consumption and carbon emissions as a result," said energy and climate change secretary Ed Miliband. "Smart meters will also mean the end of inaccurate bills and estimated meter readings."
Under the preferred rollout option, the government will adopt a "central communications model" where energy suppliers are responsible for installing and maintaining smart meters, but the transmission and management of the data to and from the device will be handled by a new nationwide body.
However, the government said it would also consider two alternative approaches as part of the consultation, which would either see individual energy companies manage all aspects of smart metering, or require the establishment of regional franchises to handle the installation of the meters while the data is managed by a new national body.
"This is a big project affecting 26 million homes, and several million businesses, so it's important we design a system that brings best value to everyone involved," said Miliband.
The three proposals will now be open to consultation until 24 July 2009 and are likely to further fuel a long-running debate among energy firms about how best to roll out the technology.
The Local Government Association and some energy industry insiders have called for the adoption of a regional franchise approach, arguing that it will be far more cost effective to send one team to carry out installations on a street than require each energy firm to carry out installations only for its own customers. However, some within the industry are fearful that the absence of competition in such an approach will make the franchises more costly and reduce the likelihood of the most effective meters being installed.
Based on the government's impact assessment, the rollout of smart meters will deliver net benefits of £2.5bn-£3.6bn over the next two decades, in the form of lower bills and reduced costs for energy firms.
It said that the technology will also underpin the shift to a lower-carbon energy infrastructure, allowing energy firms to offer more sophisticated tariffs that reduce the price of energy used at off peak times, and making it easier for them to feed energy from customers who deploy micro and community-level renewable energy generation systems into the grid.
Smart meters would also support smart grid technologies capable of turning off electrical appliances such as fridges and washing machines at times of peak energy use and make it easier to manage the electric car recharging infrastructure that is likely to be required if the government's plans for increased use of electric vehicles prove successful.
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WHAT DO YOU THINK? Add your comment
What's so SMART about total control?
Smart Meters have a hidden agenda. What is it? United Nations Agenda 21--Sustainable Development. The meters are designed to monitor your usage and transmit the information to the main network. The meter can be shut off remotely at any time. Say that again. The meter can be shut off at any time without anyone coming onto your property. Agenda 21 involves the gathering of personal data and using it to pressure and manipulate the populace. The program was initiated in 1992 at the UN Earth Summit in Rio, and was agreed to by 179 countries, including yours. Read more about this issue at: www.DemocratsAgainstUNAgenda21.com
Posted by Democrats Against UN Agenda 21, 21 Feb 2011
A STEP IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION
The introduction of smart meters should remove the problem of overpayment of users with token fed units. Frequently these users are faced with massive bills due to wrong calibration - the very people who can least afford it. In addition it removes the need for estimated bills.
Posted by Derek Smith, 13 May 2009
About time...
It's about time we had meters that tell users in Pounds and pence what their usage is in real time. Who looks in their utility cupboard every day to see the gas meter and understands how to apply the formula that the power company uses to convert cubic feet of gas into equivalent kiloWatt hours that are charged at 3.6p per kWh on your bill? It's ludicrous and no wonder people have absolutely no idea how much it costs to watch Eastenders or cook a Sunday Roast. As for meter readers... Why do we even have such an archaic job? Retaining that kind of employment is just "head in the sand" talk. I'm pleased for those who will get the chance to re-train for some other form of less menial work. Meter readers should be aspiring to more than crawling around in my cupboard under the stairs. There's going to be a big demand for staff in home energy management... Installing insulation, installing solar power, advice on energy saving, installing these smart meters... Use your brains rather than your knee pads folks!
Posted by AccordGuy, 13 May 2009
Waste of money!!
The meters out there at the moment are perfectly fine yet the gov want to spend billions on upgrading them to smart meters and for what? Let?s face it if you use allot of energy now a digital meter won?t change that, you will still use it. So what does this mean, well there is talk of charging every house hold £5 for a meter that will only benefit the energy giants who are losing money on underestimated bills! What about meter readers? I work for an energy giant and there?s thousands of meter readers that are going to be jobless! I find the proposal outrageous, why isn?t the money being spent on helping people back into work, the government is spending our money in taxes AND taking that £5 off us all to do something we already had in the first place! Then we have the "Green" issue with them supposedly helping us save energy, were the manufacturing energy consumptions in the picture when they worked that out? I'm sure all that plastic and PCB is not too environmentally friendly ether!
Posted by Andy, 13 May 2009