Just Say No to Big Brother’s Smart Meters by Orlean Koehle
According to Battelle's August 27, 2009 press release:
The project will involve more than 60,000 metered customers in Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington and Wyoming. Using smart grid technologies, the project will engage system assets exceeding 112 megawatts, the equivalent of power to serve 86,000 households. 'The proposed demonstration will study smart grid benefits at unprecedented geographic breadth across five states, spanning the electrical system from generation to end-use, and containing many key functions of the future smart grid,' said Mike Davis, a Battelle vice president. 'The intended impact of this project will span well beyond traditional utility service territory boundaries, helping to enable a future grid that meets pressing local, regional and national needs.'
Battelle and BPA intend to work closely together and there is an obvious blurring as to who is really in control of the project's management during the test period. In a "For Internal Use Only" document written in August 2009, BPA offers talking points to its partners. It states that "Smart Grid technology includes everything from interactive appliances in homes to smart meters, substation automation and sensors on transmission lines." [Emphasis added]
Network of Things: As the WorldWide is to the internet, Network of Things
(NOT) is
inanimate objects from shoes to refrigerators. This concept is
"shovel ready" for Smart Grid
implementation because appliances, meters and substations are all inanimate items that technocrats would have communicating with each other
For instance, in 2008 the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) developed this small circuit board called a "Grid Friendly Appliance Controller." According to a Department of Energy brochure,
118
appliances. This brand new technology creates a wireless network between a broad range
to of
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