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Understanding Smart Meters and AMI

Smart meters are electronic devices that record electricity usage hourly or more frequently and transmit this data back to utilities for monitoring and billing purposes. Unlike home energy monitors, smart meters allow two-way communication between the meter and central system. They can gather remote usage reports, which differs from traditional automatic meter reading. Smart meters may measure other utilities besides electricity, like natural gas or water. They provide additional features over interval meters like power outage notifications and quality monitoring. Research shows many consumers confuse smart meters with energy monitors for homes. While smart meters can save energy companies money, consumer benefits depend on actively changing energy use in response to time-of-use pricing programs or selling electricity back to the grid.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
308 views2 pages

Understanding Smart Meters and AMI

Smart meters are electronic devices that record electricity usage hourly or more frequently and transmit this data back to utilities for monitoring and billing purposes. Unlike home energy monitors, smart meters allow two-way communication between the meter and central system. They can gather remote usage reports, which differs from traditional automatic meter reading. Smart meters may measure other utilities besides electricity, like natural gas or water. They provide additional features over interval meters like power outage notifications and quality monitoring. Research shows many consumers confuse smart meters with energy monitors for homes. While smart meters can save energy companies money, consumer benefits depend on actively changing energy use in response to time-of-use pricing programs or selling electricity back to the grid.

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INTRODUCTION

A smart meter is an electronic device that records consumption of electric energy in intervals of
an hour or less and communicates that information at least daily back to the utility for monitoring
and billing. Smart meters enable two-way communication between the meter and the central
system. Unlike home energy monitors, smart meters can gather data for remote reporting. Such
an advanced metering infrastructure (AMI) differs from traditional automatic meter
reading (AMR) in that it enables two-way communications with the meter. Communications
from the meter to the network can be done via fixed wired connections (such as power line
communications) or via wireless. In using wireless, one can opt for cellular communications
(which can be expensive), Wi-Fi (readily available), wireless ad hoc networks over Wi-
FI, wireless mesh networks, low power long range wireless (LORA), ZigBee (low power low
data rate wireless), Wi-SUN (Smart Utility Networks), etc.

The term Smart Meter often refers to an electricity meter, but it also may mean a device
measuring natural gas or water consumption.

Similar meters, usually referred to as interval or time-of-use meters, have existed for years, but
"Smart Meters" usually involve real-time or near real-time sensors, power outage notification,
and power quality monitoring. These additional features are more than simple automated meter
reading (AMR). They are similar in many respects to Advanced Metering Infrastructure (AMI)
meters. Interval and time-of-use meters historically have been installed to measure commercial
and industrial customers, but may not have automatic reading.

Research by Which?, the UK consumer group, showed that as many as one in three confuse
smart meters with energy monitors, also known as in-home display monitors. The roll-out of
smart meters is one strategy for energy savings. While energy suppliers in the UK could save
around £300 million a year from their introduction, consumer benefits will depend on people
actively changing their energy use. For example, time of use tariffs offering lower rates at off-
peak times, and selling electricity back to the grid with net metering, may also benefit
consumers.

The installed base of smart meters in Europe at the end of 2008 was about 39 million units,
according to analyst firm Berg Insight. Globally, Pike Research found that smart meter shipments
were 17.4 million units for the first quarter of 2011. Vision gain determined that the value of the
global smart meter market would reach $7 billion in 2012.

Smart meters may be part of a smart grid, but alone, they do not constitute a smart grid.

The smart meters record distribution unit information and bundle it over a node in tabular form.
The compiled bundles are then transformed to a grid readable format i.e. RDF. The distribution
nodes then process RDF datasets through transformation channels and store them into semantic
reservoirs as shown in Fig. 1.

FIGURE 1. Smart meters RDF data storage into smart grid.

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