Participating customers will receive up-to-the-minute information on their
energy use through networked display units and text messaging services.
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The aim is to find out how customers will want to use the technology,
Npower commercial metering manager Jane
Franklin told Computing.
“We are concentrating on customer reaction,” she said. “We will be able to
provide information in a number of ways and will be looking at how people want
to receive it.”
Options include providing data on specific activities affecting consumption,
such as a spike in energy use caused by turning on a power shower, or alerts
when use reaches a certain level.
As part of the pilot, smart technology will also be automatically installed
in Npower-served premises requiring meter upgrades to ensure a realistic
response.
“If a customer knows they are being monitored, they may react differently,” said
Franklin.
There have been widespread calls for
mandatory rollout of smart
meters following the government’s energy white paper in May. But the utilities
industry needs to find a commercially sustainable model for the investment, said
Franklin.
“The trial will inform the debate about finding a cost-effective solution to
implementing universal smart metering,” she said.
The availability of detailed information about energy use will be a reality
check for consumers, said Binoy Dharsi, lead analyst for energy and utilities at
Datamonitor. “It will be like supermarket price tags for energy,” he said.
It will also mean the end of estimated billing.
“People will get accurate bills for a change, which has long been a bugbear
for the industry,” said Dharsi.
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