White House Feels Heat On HAN Standards

May 28, 2010

The White House is feeling industry pressure to complete an initial set of HAN standards as fears of a smart-grid information bottleneck grow.

Pressure falls on NIST to finalize home area network standards for smart grid

The heat is coming from appliances manufacturers who hope to enlist administration support in the National Institute of Standards and Technology review now underway to assure interoperability among competing standards and protocols.

NIST published a “roadmap” document in January with a preferred list of smart grid and home area network standards, but a schedule for final selection doesn’t appear to be in place. The aim of the review is prevent market confusion and divergence, and to promote open communications. NIST hopes to establish 77 smart-gird standards over the next few years with 14 this year.

“This has to be done as quickly as possible, “ concedes John McDonald, a general manager at GE and chair of the governing board of NIST’s Smart Grid Interoperability Panel. “There has been a lot of pressure at the White House.”

Among the leading candidates in the initial HAN standards race are the wireless technologies Zigbee and Wi-Fi and the powerline technology HomePlug. Determining a final list will provide big benefits if utilities are to deliver on the promise of demand response and greater system efficiency. Utilities need an effective distribution system with reliable two-way communications extended into the home if they hope to lower residential loads during high demand periods –perhaps by delaying defrost cycles in refrigerators or reducing power to stove tops.

California is waiting for national action so it doesn't place standed assets in the field, says CPUC Utiliites Energineer Wendy Al;-Mukdad.

From the industry perspective, standards will lower products costs and simplify development. At GE, a new hybrid water heater comes with a Zigbee connector on its side instead of integrated inside. That way it can be replaced if standards favor a different technology. However, integration would make the product less expensive to manufacture.

Product design is of particular important to companies such as Whirlpool, which promises to have 1 million smart dryers in the market by the end of 2011.

NIST’s next step is to broaden its examination of technologies beyond the Unites States to determine how technology development in places such as Japan and China might influence deployment here.

Despite the work ahead, McDonald says he is serious about getting the standards work completed sooner rather than later. It that means changing the leadership, then a change needs to be considered, he says.

He adds: “If we don’t have the house situation worked out, it’s going to be a bottleneck.”

The fallout from the lack of standards is already being felt in places such as California, where the California Public Utilities Commission put off smart grid decisions for fear of placing non-standard equipment in the field.

The commission wants to make sure utility investments don’t become “stranded assets,” said Utilities Engineer Wendy Al-Mukdad at this week at the ConnectivityWeek conference in Santa Clara. As a result, “We’re waiting for a lot of the national action on standards and protocols” to conclude.


ZigBee 2.0 Expected Before Year End

April 30, 2010

The Zigbee Alliance expects to release a new version of the wireless smart-grid standard in the second half of the year with a more polished, commercial edition of the standard by mid 2011.

ZigBee is expected to be included in 100 million radio chips this year

The low-power wireless technology has become increasingly popular in the smart grid, shipping inside 20 million radio chips last year and projected to be included in 100 million this year.

Development of new versions, however, has been slow due to the number of companies and government officials now involved in their approval.

The alliance is now on track to unveil a reasonably solid version of the new standard before the end of the year, said Adrian Tuck, CEO of Tendril Networks and vice chairman of the alliance. A more finalized edition should be complete during the first half of 2011, he said at the GreenNet conference in San Francisco.

Zigbee’s popularity has been driven by its simplicity and low energy use. Batteries in a Zigbee device last for years, not hours. That’s because unlike the wireless technologies Wi-Fi and Bluetooth, it transmits at lower data rates, sending only basic commands, such as on and off. It also is less expensive.

Zigbee is expected to be the protocol used in many smart meters to create home networks and communicate with thermostats, lighting, air conditioners and appliances. The aim is to will let people better manage their energy use even when outside the home.

The new version has an IP-based energy management technology that will expand its use, the alliance says.

The first version of ZigBee became available in May 2008 and is primarily used in commercial and industrial systems, such as alarm and monitoring equipment, and in custom home-automation systems

The alliance has more than 350 members, including Intel and Cypress Semiconductor.


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