A new report by Innovation Observatory, more than $378 billion will be collectively invested in building electricity smart grids by 2030. Sources: Http://Xrl.Us/Bii2sf http://xrl.us/bigqfh

Tuesday, February 21, 2006

EUROPE: OPERA® Approves First Specification for Powerline Communications Access


OPERA® Approves First Specification for Powerline Communications Access

Global Milestone Will Lead to the Production of Multiple Sources of Silicon and Standard, Interoperable PLC Equipment. Design of Systems on Silicon (DS2) Technology Selected as Baseline for Specification.



Madrid, 21st February 2006 – The Open PLC European Research Alliance (OPERA) today announced the development and approval of the first open global specification for Powerline Communications (PLC) access, also known as Broadband over Powerline (BPL). This specification will accelerate mass rollout of high-speed, low-cost, broadband access, voice and audiovisual services, as well as utility applications for control and management operations. Technology from Spanish chipmaker Design of Systems on Silicon (DS2) was selected as the baseline for the specification.

The OPERA specification provides a baseline for both PLC access technology as well as in-building applications, where powerline technology extends existing backbone technologies such as fiber to the home (FTTx), DSL and coax. The OPERA Specification has the support of the Universal Powerline Association (UPA), a group that includes leading PLC equipment suppliers.

“This is truly a major step forward for powerline communications. The level of industry cooperation and support has been overwhelming allowing OPERA to produce a specification that meets the requirements imposed by global electricity companies", said Victor Dominguez, Director of Strategy and Standardization at DS2.

After two years of development, a consortium of industry specialists from 37 companies and 10 universities, and supported by the European Commission, developed the specification based on a marketing and functional requirement blueprint ratified by OPERA. The Powerline Utility Alliance (PUA), which includes leading international utility companies such as ENDESA, ENEL, EDF, and IBERDROLA, designed the blueprint to cover all grid characteristics and to address global regulatory and industrial parameters.

Following an open call for proposals, the OPERA Specification Working Group tested technologies from various international vendors to evaluate performance, notching capabilities and industrial maturity against the blueprint requirements. The final specification includes contributions from various OPERA partners, including ASCOM, ADD, DS2, Dimat, EdF, Endesa, Iberdrola, Mainnet, Ilevo (Schneider Electric), PPC, Robotiker, Spidcom, Telvent, University of Dresden, University of Karlsruhe, and Yitran.

Brett Kilbourne, Director of Regulatory Affairs and Associate Counsel at United Telecom Council, stated - "This is clearly a major step forward. With numerous pilots and several major commercial deployments emerging in the US the time is ripe for a standard to facilitate mass roll-out."

The new specification provides for interoperability for non-OPERA technologies by means of a co-existence mechanism. This unique feature also guarantees that future versions of OPERA technology will be compatible with today’s specifications, smoothing the way for investment in the technology. The OPERA Specification has the support of the Universal Powerline Association (UPA), a group that includes leading PLC equipment suppliers.

The OPERA Board, including leading users of this technology, agreed upon intellectual property and licensing issues to accelerate final approval of the milestone document. The OPERA PLC specification will be promoted through international standardization organizations, including IEEE and ETSI.


About OPERA

OPERA stands for Open PLC Research Alliance and aims to develop a new generation PLC access standard to accelerate the adoption of low cost, high performance broadband access PLC. The project currently has 37 partners including electricity utilities, OEM manufacturers, technology providers, universities, engineering and consultancy companies and telecom operators. OPERA is co-financed by the European Union under the Sixth R&D Framework Program (FP6), and specifically addresses the theme “Broadband for all” which falls under the responsibility of the Information Society and Technologies Directorate General.

www.ist-OPERA.org

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