A final decision on a national rollout of smart meters should happen towards
the end of 2008, according to the government, which will consider industry
responses and information from smart metering trials.
The department is finalising its impact assessment model and the outcome of
trials will also be considered, said a spokeswoman for DBERR.
“More work is going on around the impact assessment to refine the model,” she
said.
“This will hopefully be finished by November, by which time trials will have
been reported on and those findings will feed into a decision. There will be a
final decision on national rollout towards the end of the year as well.”
The Energy Retail Association
(ERA) is still optimistic about a satisfactory outcome for industry, which has
been urging the government to mandate a rollout of smart meters to all homes in
the UK. It believes that the government’s method of estimating the cost of a
rollout could be too conservative.
"We welcome the opportunity to work with BERR to achieve an accurate impact
assessment for the rollout of smart meters across Britain,” said Duncan
Sedgwick, chief executive of the ERA.
"The industry is confident that the government will reach a positive balance
in favour of smart metering once adjustments are made to reflect the industry's
own experience of metering operations over many years, and their up-to-date
knowledge of developing and trialling smart metering.
"The ERA has put forward recommendations including adjustments to the
weighting on the government's optimism bias, which we feel overestimates the
amount that costs could rise for some aspects including meter cost, meter
installation and communication between the meter and the supplier.”
Last month, Computing reported that Conservative and Liberal
Democrat MPs had accused the government of “dithering” over a compulsory
rollout, and that a supplier for the BERR-run trials said the government had
overshot its cost estimate by £7.2bn.
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