1 / 16

Real Time Energy Metering (RTEM)

Real Time Energy Metering (RTEM). A Step Into The Future Robert Brice San Diego Gas & Electric Company Metering Americas 2004. Challenging Questions. What internal and external systems (hardware and software) will be required to facilitate widespread dynamic electric rates?

Download Presentation

Real Time Energy Metering (RTEM)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Real Time Energy Metering(RTEM) A Step Into The Future Robert Brice San Diego Gas & Electric Company Metering Americas 2004

  2. Challenging Questions • What internal and external systems (hardware and software) will be required to facilitate widespread dynamic electric rates? • What will our customers want and need to help them adapt and respond to dynamic electric rates? • What impact will this very fundamental change have on utility operations, infrastructure and budgets? Metering Americas 2004

  3. Search for Answers Researched the AMR Industry Extensive RFI / RFP Process System Demonstration and Evaluations Proposal Evaluation and Analysis Supplier Selections Metering Americas 2004

  4. Findings from our Search • Apparent disconnect with an AMR industry focused on replacing meter readers • Limited industry focus on electric interval data collection and processing for dynamic rate billing • No one product would meet all of SDG&E’s needs • No “off the shelf” solutions were available • Product development would be required Metering Americas 2004

  5. Technical Requirements Collect electric interval data at the meter • Solid state ANSI / IEEE compliant meters • Built in data recovery method • Sufficient memory at the meter to support data integrity • Restrict and Enable customer access to meter data • C&I Real Time Access via KYZ output • C&I and Residential via next day Web data presentation • C&I and Residential via limited RF direct access (future) Consumption gas and water meter reading • Full intrinsic safety compliance for Gas AMR device • Adaptable to majority of current meter inventory • No external wiring between meters Metering Americas 2004

  6. Technical Requirements Two Way Communications • Leverage existing public and private networks • Adaptable to changing communications industry Scalable System • C&I customers in phases (25,000) • Spot deployable to a geographic area • Residential expansion to all customers (1,300,000) • Economies of scale: decreasing average O&M and Capital costs as meters are added to the network Metering Americas 2004

  7. AMR System Supplier Silver Spring Networks (formally Innovatec Communications) • Had the appropriate system architecture to meet our technical requirements • Wanted a utility ‘proxy’ to aid in further system development efforts • System Development Relationship • Provide utility requirements (gas and electric) • Provide technical development assistance / testing • Data systems integration • Communications systems integration • Hardware testing and certification • Deployment planning Metering Americas 2004

  8. System Architecture Solid state ANSI / IEEE compliant IDR Meters • Single and poly phase • C12.19 data tables Integrated two-way communications • Under glass, plug and play installation Wireless 900-MHz LAN • (.1 watt) between gas and water meters and the electric meter • (1.0 watt) between the electric meter / relay / gateway Multiple WAN options • Land line (POTS) • Cellular (CDMA – circuit and packet switched) • Private (DataTac, others) Metering Americas 2004

  9. System Architecture Gateway Utility Operations Public / Private Networks Relay Relay Meter Communications Underglass CIS Gas Metering Americas 2004

  10. System Architecture • Meters and communications devices self configure to the network with redundant communications paths • Gateway manages schedules and consolidates data for LAN/WAN transmission • Gateway communicates with host using a combination of public and private SDG&E owned networks • Host software is Web-based application server that manages data export to utility measurement and billing systems • Host software facilitates scheduling, alarm management, on-demand reads, etc. Metering Americas 2004

  11. Accomplishments • Successful • Integration with the GE kV2 single and poly phase electric meter • Integration with the Qualcomm CDMA circuit switched modem • Engineering of SSN gateway to accommodate Motorola DataTac and SDG&E fiber assets • Design and integration of multi-hop relay capability at the electric meter • Design and integration of a pole top stand-alone relay device • Design and integration of scaleable system operating software • Demonstration of very robust and reliable communications system performance Metering Americas 2004

  12. Going Forward • Kearny Mesa C&I Pilot • 50 meters in 2004 • Mission Village Residential Pilot (electric, gas and water) • 50 meters in 2004 • San Clemente C&I and Residential Pilot • 50 meters in 2005 • RTEM C&I Expansion • 500 - 1,000 meters in late 2004 – early 2005 • Balance of approved RTEM deployments will be dependent upon the outcome and timing of the current Statewide Pricing Pilots (SPP) Metering Americas 2004

  13. Findings • Lack of a true “standards compliant” meter makes communications integration difficult and costly for any AMR supplier • Some meter companies are entering the AMR market and are slow to work with other AMR system providers who are now looked at as competitors • Meter industry is slow to produce a low cost interval meter (single phase or poly phase) Metering Americas 2004

  14. Findings • Utility back office systems may require a lot of reengineering / development to move to interval data processing and billing • Public communications technologies are changing at a rapid pace Metering Americas 2004

  15. Conclusions • Strategic Planning is absolutely necessary • Understand the changes facing our industry • Invest in defining requirement up front • Think long term • Keep your options open • Watch the industry • Look for flexibility over the long haul • Don’t forget your sister utilities • Develop partnerships • Be relentless, don’t settle for less than you need Metering Americas 2004

  16. Questions Real Time Energy Metering (RTEM) A Step Into The Future Metering Americas 2004

More Related