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, June 09, 2009

Duke Energy Enlists Cisco in Smart Grid Efforts

Duke Energy Enlists Cisco in Smart Grid Efforts
Jeff St. John June 9, 2009

The Charlotte, N.C.-based utility will enlist the networking giant in a broad range of smart grid efforts. It's the second U.S. utility to publicly announce a partnership with Cisco in its big push into what it believes will be a $20 billion per year market.

Duke Energy said Tuesday it has enlisted Cisco Systems in a three-year project to build out an "end-to-end, smart grid communications architecture," becoming the second U.S. utility to enlist the networking giant in its smart grid efforts.

Cisco announced its big push into smart grid technologies last month, shortly after it was named as a partner for a one-million smart meter project being undertaken by Florida Power and Light in Miami (see Cisco Wants to Be Everywhere in Smart Grid) and A Million Smart Meters for Miami).

Charlotte, N.C.-based Duke, for its part, has taken a go-slow approach to its smart grid efforts, compared to other utilities now deploying millions of smart meters to their customers. Duke has so far installed about 60,000 smart meters in Cincinnati, working with smart meter provider Echelon Corp..

Later this year the utility plans to start a five-year project to bring more than 700,000 smart electric meters and 450,00 smart natural gas meters to its Ohio service territory. Duke also is seeking regulator permission to install about 800,000 smart meters in its Indiana service territory.

Duke is also testing a so-called "microgrid" project in Charlotte, involving about 100 homes connected to a solar photovoltaic power plant and both large and small-scale energy storage. It also intends to install so-called distribution automation hardware and software to improve distribution grid reliability in both Ohio and Indiana.

Cisco and Duke said that the architecture they're deploying would be based on Internet protocol – no surprise, given Cisco's emphasis on IP as a common standard for smart grid technology.

Beyond that, the two companies didn't provide many specifics on their plan, other than to say they would test a variety of communications hardware and software on the grid, as well as devices in customers' homes aimed at reducing their electricity consumption (see The Smart Home, Part I).

While Duke didn't specify which equipment providers it would work with, it has been testing multi-modal communications devices from smart meter networking company SmartSynch and smart grid communications technology provider Ambient Corp. (see SmartSynch's Smart Grid in a Box).

And of course, Cisco has said it will develop rugged, weatherproof routers and servers to serve in utility applications.

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