Smart-meter makers embark on common standards push

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Three leading utility meter manufacturers have joined forces to work on developing standards that will let their smart meters work in any British home's smart energy system.

The Elster, Landis+Gyr and Secure said on Thursday that they will use open standards and available specifications for smart meter technologies to "dramatically accelerate the rollout of gas and electricity smart meters in the UK".

Smart meters are to be installed in homes and businesses across the country by 2020 as the basis for the UK's 'smart grid' and on Tuesday, the energy regulator Ofgem announced financial incentives for energy suppliers to invest in smart-metering technology. This intelligent network promises to improve energy efficiency by reporting usage far more accurately than at present and coordinating supply accordingly.

"Smart metering in the UK is a huge technical and logistical project," Elster executive vice president Frank Hyldmar said in a joint statement. "Interim solutions jointly developed by industry leaders can only ease the transition to open standards and enable an earlier adoption of smart-metering solutions."

Secure's managing director, Babu Babel, said in the statement that the initiative for common standards will "provide the market with workable solutions far more quickly than current processes and provide a bridge to an enduring interoperable market".

The standards will give energy suppliers a range of smart meters and in-home displays that use current GPRS networks, but that will also be upgradeable to use other communication standards, according to the statement. Last week, BT, Arqiva and Detica announced a partnership that will bid for the communications part of the national smart-grid rollout, using a long-range radio technology called FlexNet.

Elster, Landis+Gyr and Secure said they will formulate a roadmap for "interchangeable and interoperable command sets to support smart home area networks (HANs) based on Zigbee's smart energy profile (SEP) and wide area networks (WANs) based on DLMS protocols, ultimately ensuring that any smart product from any of the three can be installed as part of any given household's smart system".

The companies aim to have this interoperability in place in September 2011.

Landis+Gyr supplies smart meters for the Californian energy company Pacific Gas & Electric (PG&E), which admitted in May that thousands of its meters had technical problems. At the time, PG&E said one percent of its customers with smart meters had seen their utility bills go up due to the faults, but also pointed out that 99 percent billing accuracy is better than that achieved using traditional meters.

At this week's Black Hat conference, experts expressed fears over the security of Scada (supervisory control and data acquisition) systems such as those used in smart grids, predicting that such systems' weak firewalls could be susceptible to attacks.

Talkback

After reading quite a few horror story's regarding these not-so-smart-meter's I think the financial incentives scheme should be dropped, as this only encourages rapid deployment of unproven and unprotected technology.

Common standards should have already being in place way before this was even allowed to approach the table, along with serious security measures. A few of the above mentioned companies are already operating these meter's in the U.S. and they dare not activate the GPRS functions as of yet, because they is ZERO SECURITY MEASURES in place for them.

Yet here in the U.K. the partners are wanting to deploy GPRS from the word go without any security measures in place, another classic case of the British government blindly following American adoption schemes.

The whole thing is horrific.

CA 31 July, 2010 20:27
Reply

Very much agree with CA. I see a world of hurt and pain ahead, and it will be the users (who have no control over the system) who will suffer.

Tezzer 1 August, 2010 14:22
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