What Is Smart Grid and Why Is It Important?
What Is Smart Grid and Why Is It Important?
Smart Grid refers to an improved electricity supply chain that runs from a major power plant all the way
inside your home. In short, there are thousands of power plants throughout the United States that generate
electricity using wind energy, nuclear energy, coal, hydro, natural gas, and a variety of other
resources.These generating stations produce electricity at a certain electrical voltage.This voltage is then
“stepped-up” (increased) to very high voltages, such as 500,000 volts, to increase the efficiency of power
transmission over long distances. Once this electrical power gets near your town or city, the electrical
voltage is “stepped-down” (decreased) in a utility substation to a lower voltage for distribution around your
town or city. As this electrical power gets closer to your home, it is stepped-down by another transformer
to the voltage you use in your home. This power enters your home through your electrical meter. The
voltage in your home is typically 110-120 volts for most appliances, but may also be 220-240 volts for an
electric range, clothes dryer, or air conditioner.
In many areas of the United States, the electricity delivery system described above is getting old and worn
out. In addition, population growth in some areas has caused the entire transmission system to be over used
and fragile. At the same time, you have probably added more electronic devices to your home, such as
computers, high-definition TV’s, microwave ovens, wireless telephones, and even electronic controls on
refrigerators, ovens, and dishwashers. These new appliances are more sensitive to variations in electric
voltage than old appliances, motors, and incandescent light bulbs. Unfortunately, the entire electrical grid is
becoming more fragile at the same time the appliances in your home are getting more sensitive to electrical
variations. In short, the reliability of electrical power in the United States will decline unless we do
something about it now.
Adding new transmission lines will help the utilities get more power from the power plants to your home.
However, many communities don’t want new power lines in their areas. In addition, adding new capacity,
although needed, will not increase the reliability of all the old electrical equipment reaching the end of its
useful life. What is needed is a new approach that significantly increases the efficiency of the entire
electrical delivery system. This approach will not only increase reliability, but will also reduce energy in
the delivery process and thereby reduce greenhouse house emissions. We call this new approach Smart
Grid.
The basic concept of Smart Grid is to add monitoring, analysis, control, and communication capabilities to
the national electrical delivery system to maximize the throughput of the system while reducing the energy
consumption. The Smart Grid will allow utilities to move electricity around the system as efficiency and
economically as possible. It will also allow the homeowner and business to useelectricity as economically
as possible. You may want to keep your house set at 75 degrees F in the summer time when prices are low,
but you may be willing to increase your thermostat to 78 degrees F if prices are high. Similarly, you may
want to dry your clothes for 5 cents per kilowatt-hour at 9:00 pm in stead of 15 cents per kilowatt-hour at
2:00 pm in the afternoon. You will have the choice and flexibility to manage your electrical use while
minimizing your costs.
Smart Grid builds on many of the technologies already used by electric utilities but adds communication
and control capabilities that will optimize the operation of the entire electrical grid. Smart Grid is also
positioned to take advantage of new technologies, such as plug-in hybrid electric vehicles, various forms of
distributed generation, solar energy, smart metering, lighting management systems, distribution
automation, and many more.
What the smart grid means to you
by Martin LaMonica
Yet again, the tech industry has a buzzword everyone seems to be using but few really understand.
The smart grid follows the footsteps of the Internet and the interstate highway system--they are giant
investments in infrastructure. It's not so much a single thing as it is a goal to give the electricity system a
digital makeover to make it more efficient and reliable.
Governments and utilities around the world are devoting billions of dollars to lay new transmission lines
and make the electricity network operate more like the computer networks we access every day. Big tech
vendors and hundreds of start-ups are jockeying for prominence in the smart grid.
The buzz reflects how important reliable, affordable, and cleaner energy is to our modern lifestyle and
economy. But what does it mean for individuals? And what technologies make up the smart grid? To give
you a clue on what the smart-grid fuss is all about, we offer this FAQ.
What would a smart grid be able to do that today's not-so-smart grid can't?
Right now, if there's a breakdown at your local substation, the utility usually finds out when customers call
to complain. Placing a networked sensor inside a transformer or along wires could locate and report a
problem, or prevent it from happening in the first place.
Despite living in the age of information, most of us only get a glimpse of our energy consumption when the
utility bills come once a month. In people's homes, the smart grid should mean more detailed information
through home energy-monitoring tools. These can be small displays or Web-based programs that give a
real-time view of how much energy you're using, which appliances consume the most, and how your home
compares to others. Just surfacing that information will give people ideas on how to shave energy bills by 5
to 15 percent, utility executives say.
What's needed to start is a smart meter with two-way communications or some other kind of gateway. Once
that conduit is put in place, consumers can get more detailed energy data and start taking advantage of
efficiency incentives, such as charging your plug-in electric vehicle in the middle of the night to get off-
peak rates.
In theory, networked appliances are smarter and more efficient. GE and start-up display-maker Tendril, for
example, will test big appliances--refrigerators, washing machines, and the like--that can get information
on fluctuating electricity prices to do its job more efficiently. It could be as simple as making ice or running
the dishwasher in the middle of the night. Or, as part of a home-area network, consumers could program
lighting and major appliances on a schedule.
The next step toward efficiency is what's called demand response. The goal here is to dial back energy
consumption at peak times. This is very important to utilities because it's costly and polluting to bring on
auxiliary power plants to meet, say, a spike in demand from the air conditioning load on a hot summer day.
Consumers and businesses have financial incentives to participate, such as a discounted rate. "Shedding
load" could mean turning the gas heat off of the clothes drier for a few minutes or dimming the lights in a
supermarket in the middle of the day.
A smarter grid also makes distributed energy, such as home solar systems, more viable and user-friendly.
With a smart meter and monitoring software, a homeowner can see how much solar panels are producing
and their carbon footprint is being reduced. A utility, too, is keenly interested in how much distributed
energy is available so it can calibrate its own daily power generation.
When you go deeper into the smart grid, though, you realize it isn't just about a more detailed utility bill. It
can also diversify our energy sources, potentially avoiding the need to build new power plants to meet
growing demand.
Consider Duke Energy's smart-grid trial in Charlotte, N.C. A substation--the point that distributes
electricity from long-haul transmission lines to a neighborhood--is equipped with 213 solar panels and a
large battery. About 100 households have smart meters and in-home energy management tools.
When the sun is shining, the 50-kilowatt solar array makes electricity for the homes in the neighborhood. It
also feeds the battery, giving the area a few hours of backup power in the case of an outage and a buffer to
draw from during peak times. Consumers can take part in demand-response programs, too, to get a
reduction on their electricity bill.
One of the more aggressive utilities in this area, Duke plans to have millions of smart meters installed in
homes over the next two years. In addition, it envisions putting sensors along power lines, and networking
gear, such as routers, in substations and transformers. In people's homes, individual appliances like water
heaters could eventually be networked as well.
The project reflects how the utility industry seems to be following the path of the computing industry,
which went from centralized processing with mainframes to a much more distributed and varied
architecture.
Who are the companies participating in the smart grid?
The smart grid is shaping up to be a giant mash-up of the electricity utility, computing, and
communications industries.
Heavyweight tech companies--Cisco, IBM, Microsoft, and Google--all have serious initiatives in this area
and loom large among utility executives working on smart-grid programs.
IBM, which sees big dollar signs when it gets involved in large infrastructure projects, is building the
technology backbone for many grid modernization programs. That includes installing communications
equipment along the grid as well as the software and servers to process the mountains of data that need to
be processed.
Cisco, too, is jumping in with both feet with a broad initiative to supply networking equipment for utilities
as well as in-home energy management tools. Verizon is looking at this as well, seeing the home network
as a point to gather data on home energy use and, potentially, control lighting and appliances for better
efficiency.
Microsoft and Google are going after consumers as well while trying to sign on utility partners.
The other key players are the host of start-ups in the area, many of which focus on energy displays. A
handful of stronger network-oriented companies are emerging, notably Silver Spring Networks, which
offers a wireless card that goes into smart meters.
Finally, there's the electrical infrastructure itself: meters, transformers, transmission equipment, and other
hardware that makes the grid tick. In addition to a number of smart meter makers, there are the global
infrastructure companies like GE, Siemens, and ABB that are introducing modern control systems to
manage the flow of electricity.
OK, so the smart grid is supposed to reduce wasted energy, give consumers better information, and
allow the grid to use more solar and wind power. What's the hold-up?
Where to start?
Utilities aren't known as the most fleet-of-foot businesses and the energy industry invests a lower
percentage of revenue in technology than most industries. This helps explain why we've been hearing about
the grid for 10 years but very few of us actually have it.
But lack of investment is only part of the picture. The whole point of a smarter grid is to use electricity
more efficiently, but in many states in the U.S. utilities operate without strong incentives for efficiency, say
industry executives. They invest big dollars--think multibillion-dollar power plants--based on their ability
to sell more kilowatt-hours, not less. The more progressive utilities have found ways to justify their
investments in the smart grid based on savings from energy reductions, but many utilities aren't nearly as
enthusiastic because of how they are regulated.
A key regulatory piece of the smart grid is time-of-day pricing, which is supposed to reflect the fluctuating
cost of energy delivery in a day. Some sort of tiered pricing would allow a consumer to take advantage of
off-peak rates, but it isn't the norm in many states.
Then there's the lack of standards for a dizzying number of tasks. The National Institute of Standards and
Technology, which is responsible for establishing an interoperability framework for smart-grid standards,
recently released a road map but everyone agrees there's much work to be done.
The basic idea: be more efficient, resilient, and able to use more renewable energy.
Amid all the technical and business challenges, there's the question of consumer acceptance. Consumers, in
general, are likely to welcome more detailed information on how much electricity, natural gas, and water
they use. But even though there's the promise of energy savings, it's not clear that people are willing to pay
much money for home energy-management tools.
Some people and businesses are willing to allow a utility to communicate through a smart meter to
remotely control the thermostat on the air conditioner in exchange for cheaper rates. But these demand-
response programs are clearly not for everyone. The trick for successful demand response programs is to
entice consumers with lower electricity bills without being intrusive or forcing a dramatic change, say
industry executives.
Finally, these technology businesses need to be profitable, but many of the technologies and business
models need to be ironed out. There's even some concern that a mini-investment bubble is building around
smart grids.
The increased use of the Internet instead of private networks for Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition
(SCADA) control systems and the bleeding together of existing corporate networks with energy providers'
control networks opens up more potential cyber-vulnerabilities, they say. Security experts are calling for
security to be better baked into the standards for the smart grid and for industry professionals to use better
security practices to avoid dangerous hacks.
The first signs will be better energy-saving tools for consumers, much like the Web brought consumers
better tools for managing personal finances. Some enthusiasts will want to closely monitor energy use and
ratchet down consumption for environmental and financial reasons. Others may just set up "auto pilot"
programs to take advantage of off-peak rates, much like you might use a programmable thermostat.
That said, it's early on and there may be a killer application that will emerge from the smart grid platform.