Editor’s note: This op-ed is by Tom Evslin, an author, entrepreneur and former Douglas administration official. This piece first appeared on his blog, Fractals of Change.
At 1:36 p.m. Sunday, the lights went out for 1,103 members of Vermont Electric Co-op (VEC) in South Hero, including us at our summer place on the lake. No surprise; tropical storm Irene was raging up Vermont. No need to call VEC in a panic, though; I could see immediately from their website that they knew about the outage, including the exact number of customers affected. VEC was the first utility in Vermont to install smart meters, and they know immediately when a meter goes silent. Unlike other utilities that haven’t installed smart meters yet, VEC doesn’t have to wait for customers to call in. Equally important, they can tell from their monitoring system almost exactly where the break is BEFORE the trucks roll so the linepeople can go straight to the problem, rather than having to search along the road or through the woods.
At 8:15 p.m., with the wind still raging, the lights came back on for most of us. It’s likely some intrepid person went up in a cherrypicker in the storm and made a repair (thank you!). Immediately, the outage website showed that 199 South Hero customers were still without power; something must have happened downstream from the original break. Without smart meters, the crews probably wouldn’t have known about the second break for quite a while, since the people who were cut off by it would have just assumed that the original problem hadn’t been fixed yet and wouldn’t have called in again until they lost patience or saw their neighbors’ lights on.
Within two years, most Vermonters should have smart meters thanks partly to a $69 million stimulus grant awarded to Vermont utilities. We’ll probably be the first state in the nation to have a near 100 percent smart grid. Outage management is only one of the many benefits of adding electronics to the power grid that we’ll see. But Sunday and Monday, outage management is a very large benefit indeed. Kudos to VEC for installing smart meters for better customer service even before they got a grant, and helping to show the whole state what the advantages of a smart grid are.






























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MUST-SEE 4-minute youtube video on Smart meters:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=8JNFr_j6kdI
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CUSTOMER UTILITY BILLS INCREASE AFTER SMART METERS INSTALLED.
Skyrocketing Utility Bills after installation
TV News Video (3 minutes)
http://www.bakersfieldnow.com/news/63581287.html?tab=video
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Top down upgrade ?
Repair crews may easily locate the damage but will they be able to get to it?
Unless road,culvert and bridge infrastructure across the state are also brought up to par the system will retain a very weak link.
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Thank you, Tom for accurately pointing out how smart meters are helping VEC during storms. It has also helped VEC cut its outages in 1/2 over the past three years.
VEC members have had a very positive response to smart meters. For VEC, even without federal assistance, the members saw an excellent payback (4.7 years on a system that will last 20 years). While some utilities may have botched their installations, that does not mean the technology is bad. Some utilities have made the mistake of overspecifying the system. Some utilities spend $2 million for the same back-office system that VEC only pays $20k/year. If utilities have to ask for a rate increase for a smart grid system, it means they have specified for features they do not need, or the utility does not understand the operational savings and advantages that a system can provide.
For VEC, smart grid is no longer a strategy, it has become part of our operating protocol; another tool in our toolbox.