
I blogged about smart grids just the
other day but they seem to be the 'in thing' and keep popping up everywhere.
The very interesting picture above is from The Guardian article
here, that promises that consumers will be able to cut down on their bills by taking advantage of smart meters.
Meanwhile European Commission is making
Smart Grids a high priority. The following is from one of their communique:
The European Commission presented its Communication on smart grids. It sets policy directions to drive forward the deployment of future European electricity networks. Bringing together latest progress in Information and Communication technologies and network development will allow electricity current to flow exactly where and when it is needed at the cheapest cost. Smart grids will give in particular to consumers the ability to follow their actual electricity consumption in real time : smart meters will give consumers strong incentives to save energy and money. Estimates show that smart electricity grids should reduce CO2 emissions in the EU by 9% and the annual household energy consumption by 10%. They also help to ensure secure functioning of the electricity system and are a key enabler of both the internal energy market and integration of vast amounts of renewable.
You can read the complete press summary
here. A new report entitled 'Smart Grids: from innovation to deployment' is available to download from
here. The European Commission Smart Grids taskforce webpage is
here.
On 17 March, game designers at the Institute for the Future, in collaboration with us at IEEE Spectrum, ran a 24-hour forecasting game called Smart Grid 2025. Weenlisted the help of listeners like you and game players around the world to brainstorm solutions to the problems the smart grid will face. That way, by 2025—when all our homes have smart meters and utilities are linking up wind farms and solar plants to national grids—it'll be running as smoothly as it possibly can.
Steven Cherry's guest is Jake Dunagan, the game's project leader at the Institute for the Future in Palo Alto, Calif. He was on this show in early March in advance of the Smart Grid 2025 game to talk about how it would work, and now he's back to tell how it went.
This interview was recorded 4 April 2011. (Listen below)
1 comment:
HI :-) am from Kenya just wanted u to know that i read ur blogs daily when updated and i am a huge fan. Keep it up
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