The Administration announced today that nine major utilities and electricity suppliers will commit to providing more than 15 million households access to data about their own energy use with a simple click of an online “Green Button.” These utilities have agreed to base their Green Buttons on a common technical standard developed in collaboration with a public-private partnership supported by the Commerce Department’s National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST).
"The Green Button Initiative will help consumers monitor and manage their energy consumption. We believe that engaging consumers as a crucial stakeholder in the process will help us achieve national energy policy goals, deliver important societal benefits and realize important advancements in the utility value chain," said Connie Durcsak, UTC President and CEO, in a press release supporting this project. Read more »
The White House is set to announce a number of public and private sector initiatives on Monday morning that are geared towards accelerating the modernization of the Nation’s electric infrastructure, bolstering electric-grid innovation, and advancing a clean energy economy. They include $250 million in Rural Utility Service (RUS) loans for smart-grid technology deployment, a private sector initiative to promote consumer-friendly tools for energy management and privacy, and the formation of a Renewable Energy Rapid Response Team which will be jointly led by the White House Council on Environmental Quality, the Department of the Interior, and the Department of Energy.
A report titled "A Policy Framework for the 21st Century Grid" by the National Science and Technology Council (NSTC) will also be released at today's event. This report will address steps the administration plans to take to meet it's goals of boosting the development and deployment of smart grid technologies, creation of standards and interoperability to drive innovation, improved grid security and resilience, and consumer-focused energy information access and engagement.
The announcement will be made at a meeting today scheduled for 10am ET. A webcast of the meeting will be available on the White House website. For more information, see this press release.
One of the biggest challenges facing the deployment of smart grids is inadequate consumer education, which is in some cases is worsened by "over-hyping" the benefits of the smart grid. This general consensus came from UTC Smart Grid Policy Summit, a two-day conference held this week in Washington, DC that featured panel discussions with key policy makers, regulators, utilities and industry associations. While the panels debated issues such as the role of state vs. federal regulators in setting smart grid policy and the pressures of cost-recovery, many of the panels often returned to the need for consumer awareness and trust. Opening Keynote Speaker, Joe Rigby, CEO and Chairman of PEPCO, addressed this concern by discussing his utility's successful pilot programs that were implemented in collaboration with state regulators and consumer groups and showed that consumers do respond positively to dynamic pricing. However, he did note that duplicating the results of a pilot in a larger territory roll-out was not easy. Read more »
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