• Friday, November 20, 2009 Latest Update: 4:41PM
Eric Wesoff | November 4, 2009 at 3:12 PM 1 Comment

GTM’s Networked Grid Event Packs the House

SAN FRANCISCO -- Smart Grid is the energy theme of the moment – hundreds of millions of government funding, billion dollar smart meter deployments, and hundreds of millions in venture capital have drawn the attention of entrepreneurs, utilities, and corporate behemoths like Cisco, Intel, Oracle, ABB and Silver Spring.

And almost 500 of these smart grid cognoscenti converged at the PG&E Auditorium in San Francisco to assess the state of this nascent many-faceted industry at Greentech Media's The Networked Grid event.

Rick Thompson, GTM's fearless smart grid leader, kicked off the event with a review of some recent industry polling. Here are a few tidbits:

  • Utilities view the benefits of the smart grid as a reduction in peak demand, energy efficiency, and an increased visibility and control.
  • As for energy storage, utilities are planning to deploy pilot energy storage systems but there remains lots of uncertainty in storage and many smart grid areas.
  • The major concerns for the utilities are back-end management and data management (clearly an opportunity for startups) as well as regulatory issues.

David J. Leeds, GTM's smart grid analyst, introduced the Real World Deployments and Policies: 2010 to 2020 panel. What follows are some of the more interesting quotes from the speakers.

Thomas Bialek, Chief Engineer, Smart Grid SDG&E:

  • "Smart grid is not a revolution, it's evolution."
  • "In California, we've been very progressive in our utility networks and smart grid is just a furtherance of those activities."
  • "Will the utilities be the gas station of the future?"

Erfan Ibrahim, EPRI:

  • "The rumor is that the grid is antiquated – that rumor is coming out of Silicon Valley and it's not true."
  • Our grid has already been made intelligent "the challenge is we don't have a way of internetworking these nodes, we need a cost effective way of interconnecting already intelligent sensors."
  • On cybersecurity: "We need more than just a big wall, we need successive challenges to the hacker. Think of grid cybersecurity in a systemic way. It's sophisticated and needs to be done with diligence."
  • "Pool pumps, water heaters, AC and thermostats are the items that utilities would like to control in order to tackle peak demand."
  • Amongst the many critical issues with the smart grid are: "Who owns the data and who has the right to use the data collected by the smart grid?"

Andrew Campbell, Senior Energy Advisor, CPUC:

  • The biggest challenge in the smart grid is considered the regulatory aspect, at least in the eyes of the utilities.
  • PG&E, SDG&E, and SCE will deploy 12 million advanced electric meters and five million gas meters by the end of 2012. (That's almost 15,000 meters a day!)
  • There is no specific smart grid related regulatory framework for these deployments.

Kevin Dasso, Senior Director, Smart Grid Strategy at PG&E:

  • "What does PG&E think of when we think smart grid? The simple explanation: An overlay of intelligence and automation over the existing grid – wires and substations – to offer new services and features. It can enable new services and features – uptake of renewables, bill management, and reliability."
  • "There is a lot of excitement but excitement can be fleeting – we need to strike while the iron is hot. There will be some kind of half-life – so strike now."
  • "Build customer awareness and expectations early. Plugging in a smart meter doesn't automatically reduce a customer's bill."
  • Standards and roadmaps can make or break the success of the smart grid. Smart grid is a journey and we really need a roadmap to guide that journey."
  • "There will be features ten years from now that we have no idea that could be done."

Comments [1]

  • Redadam 11/6/09 6:16 PM

    So if you don’t have the money for your power bill this month the power company can disable your thermostat by a clerk making an entry on a computer screen, or a hacker can freeze everyone in a city or region with a snippet of code.  How does this intrusive control over how we live our lives help us move green energy from solar and wind installations to power hungry cities in energy poor regions?

    Reply

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