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Progress: PG & E can cut off your power remotely now

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  • Progress: PG & E can cut off your power remotely now

    Surely this is what SmartMeters (tm) were intended for?

    http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/articl...NBVD.DTL&tsp=1

    More Pacific Gas and Electric Co. customers who fall behind on their bills will have their power shut off once the utility installs SmartMeters throughout its territory, the company predicted in a recent government filing.

    The advanced, digital meters allow San Francisco's PG&E to turn service off or on without sending a crew to a customer's home. As a result, PG&E expects to shut off 85 percent of the customers eligible for disconnection in 2011, according to the company. In 2008, just 37 percent of customers eligible for disconnection actually lost service.

    The number of disconnections could approach 380,000 in 2011, according to a document PG&E filed last month with the California Public Utilities Commission as part of the company's latest rate-increase request. Last year, the commission reported that PG&E shut off service to 298,020 delinquent customers in the 12-month period that ended in August.

    The prediction comes at a sensitive time.

    The number of Californians losing electricity and gas service has jumped as the recession ravages household budgets. At the same time, PG&E's SmartMeters have come under fire from some customers who say their utility bills soared after the new meters were installed.

    Mark Toney, with The Utility Reform Network, said PG&E customers should be allowed to refuse having SmartMeters installed at their homes. The utility, California's largest, has installed 4.6 million SmartMeters so far.

    "Really, it's our worst fears being realized, that PG&E sees these SmartMeters as a collections weapon to put more pressure on people by being able to shut them off so easily," said Toney, TURN's executive director.

    With older gas and electric meters, utilities had to send a technician to each customer's house in order to switch service on or off. The time and expense involved gave utilities a strong incentive to negotiate payment plans with delinquent customers, rather than disconnecting service, Toney said.

    "With SmartMeters, that incentive is gone," he said. "There's no expense to flipping a switch."

    Toney wants California energy regulators to require that utilities send someone to a customer's home before cutting off electricity and gas. His organization discovered PG&E's prediction on customer disconnections while scrutinizing the utility's rate-increase request.

    A PG&E spokesman noted that the utility gives all delinquent customers the same number of warnings that their power could be cut off. That's true for customers with old analog meters as well as new SmartMeters.

    "The important thing is, it doesn't change the process that leads up to us having to shut a customer's power off," said company spokesman David Eisenhauer.
    California's big, publicly traded utilities cut off service to 818,042 customers from September 2008 through August 2009, according to the utilities commission. That's an 8.8 percent increase from the prior 12-month period.

    At the same time, PG&E's number of disconnected customers rose 40 percent, to 298,020. Commission staff members speculated that PG&E's SmartMeters were contributing to the sharp rise in shut-offs, but didn't have proof.
    Public outcry over the rising number of disconnections spurred PG&E and California's other utilities to change some of their procedures.

    PG&E customers with overdue bills now get two more phone calls warning that they could lose service. The company has suspended until next year the practice of demanding a deposit before reconnecting customers.

    In addition, delinquent customers who work out a payment plan with PG&E but miss an additional payment won't automatically lose service. Instead, PG&E will give them a second chance to stick with their payment plans.

    "These are things we started implementing when we saw that things were getting tough for customers," Eisenhauer said.

  • #2
    Re: Progress: PG & E can cut off your power remotely now

    Originally posted by c1ue View Post
    Surely this is what SmartMeters (tm) were intended for?

    http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/articl...NBVD.DTL&tsp=1
    LOL. In some countries I have been to, stealing electricity has become an art form. And not surprisingly, like car thieves in the USA, it's the teenage boys that are most adept at rigging the apparatus to bypass the meters. They can make a good living selling that skill.

    In one developing country a friend of my parents served on one of the regional electricity Boards. I remember him telling me how difficult it was to secure funds for new generating projects to support the same National Government electrification policy. According to the official meter readings consumption was well below the existing installed generating capacity. But, of course, the region suffered regular outages as the system was in reality totally overloaded. To minimize the chance of detection, households would have the bypass jumper wires removed for a few hours every day to show some usage on the meter [hence the good living to be made ;) ]

    Welcome to the future California...

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    • #3
      Re: Progress: PG & E can cut off your power remotely now

      Anyone want to wager whether they will reduce the reconnect fee now that they can do it with the flick of a switch at the office? Didn't think so.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Progress: PG & E can cut off your power remotely now

        Originally posted by skidder View Post
        Anyone want to wager whether they will reduce the reconnect fee now that they can do it with the flick of a switch at the office? Didn't think so.
        and the redundant meter readers will now be used to improve services in other areas....:rolleyes:

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Progress: PG & E can cut off your power remotely now

          And don't forget - at least a few of the SmartMeters (tm) were installed with Stimulus funds

          http://www.businessweek.com/technolo...331_720714.htm

          It might be up for debate whether smart meters—electricity meters that provide real-time information about energy consumption and enable two-way communication between a utility and a consumer—will solve the U.S. power problem.
          But regardless, over the next couple of years an increasing number of smart meters will get installed in our homes. That's because President Barack Obama has called for the installation of 40 million smart meters, allocating at least $4.5 billion for direct investment in the smart grid through the stimulus package.
          So which manufacturers stand to gain from the coming smart meter rollout? Finding any kind of market share data on smart-meter makers is pretty difficult because the industry is so new, explains Ben Schuman, senior research analyst at Pacific Crest Securities. According to a December 2008 report from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, advanced meters account for just 4.7% of all installed meters, though that's up from less than 1% in 2006.
          Meet the Big Five

          But if you look at the planned U.S. utility smart meter contracts, there are about five big companies fighting for market share in the U.S. right now, including General Electric, Itron, Sensus,Elster, and Landis+Gyr. According to data from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and the Institute for Electric Efficiency, Itron, GE, and Landis+Gyr are leading the pack in inking next-gen smart meter contracts.
          Itron is ahead in terms of market share and mind share, according to smart grid analyst Jesse Berst. A utility doesn't do a large smart meter rollout without talking to Itron, says Berst. Currently, the company's smart meter utility contract wins include Southern California Edison, San Diego Gas & Electric, and CenterPoint Energy.
          But Berst said that one hurdle for Itron could be the fact that the smart meter market will eventually rely heavily on software, while the hardware becomes a commodity product. Itron has been at the forefront of the hardware market, but it could have a harder time competing on the software front, Berst said.
          GE's Expertise is Impressive

          On the other hand, GE is a relatively new entrant into the smart meter market, and it doesn't crack the top smart meter makers in terms of units shipped, according to the Scott Report. But Berst notes that the company could be "a dark horse" in the coming years. That's because GE has been using its massive engineering expertise to develop some new advanced smart meter technology, and utilities who have talked with GE tell Berst they've come away impressed. The company is already working with PG&E, American Electric Power, and Oklahoma Gas & Electric, among others.
          The century-old Swiss company Landis+Gyr has been a leader in the traditional electricity meter market in European for decades and is now forming partnerships with many European utilities on their smart meter rollouts. But Landis+Gyr is angling for a piece of the U.S. smart meter market, too, as it's set to get a boost from the stimulus package. When the stimulus package was signed into law, North American CEO Richard Mora said in a statement: "Landis+Gyr is ready to get to work with its utility partners to roll out smart metering projects throughout the U.S. as soon as possible." The company, which acquired Georgia-based CellNet-Hunt in 2006, is already working with Oncor and PG&E on smart meter rollouts.
          It will take a couple years to see the results of some of these smart meter buildouts, but analysts say that being able to scale and integrate meter offerings with other services, such as software-based demand management and home energy management networks, will determine which companies will gain market share. Surprisingly, price (within reason) is less important. Smart meters can run from $100 to $250 apiece by the time you factor in installation costs, but because utilities are largely regulated, they just need the regulatory commission to approve the rate hike to cover the costs.
          New Players Will Jockey for Position

          Right now, the utility industry runs primarily on established relationships, but smart meter makers like Itron, GE, and Landis+Gyr will be fighting for market share with new players, as well, in the coming U.S. smartmeter boom. Keep your eye on the smart meter market as it draws more and more attention over the next six months—it should prove interesting.
          How many jobs were created by the stimulus package again?

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          • #6
            Re: Progress: PG & E can cut off your power remotely now

            If I ever see my meter reader again I'll ask her.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Progress: PG & E can cut off your power remotely now

              The is the FIRE business model. A private agency, using public funds, changes their technology to slice and dice future rate charges. When this is fully in place, expect neighbor against neighbor schadenfreude that "you're using too much energy during peak demand hours", etc.

              As the FIREman arsonist was heard to mumble, "It's All Good."


              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Progress: PG & E can cut off your power remotely now

                Originally posted by don View Post
                The is the FIRE business model. A private agency, using public funds, changes their technology to slice and dice future rate charges. When this is fully in place, expect neighbor against neighbor schadenfreude that "you're using too much energy during peak demand hours", etc.

                As the FIREman arsonist was heard to mumble, "It's All Good."

                Where did you get that great picture of Bernanke?

                Comment

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