News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: Hydro Begins Move To New Meters |
Title: | CN BC: Hydro Begins Move To New Meters |
Published On: | 2011-07-05 |
Source: | Prince George Citizen (CN BC) |
Fetched On: | 2011-07-07 06:01:06 |
HYDRO BEGINS MOVE TO NEW METERS
A new BC Hydro smart metering program is proving a boon for Prince
George as contractor Corix Utilities sets up shop in the city to
switch more than 100,000 northern B.C. metering devices.
The initiative also promises to be a source of great savings for the
province and a headache for marijuana grow operators, said B.C. Hydro
smart meter project manager Gary Murphy.
Prince George is the new northern base of operations for the new
smart metering program recently initiated for the entire province.
As contractors begin installing approximately 40,000 new devices in
Prince George later this month, 23 employees, including a regional
manager, warehouse staff and installers will be based in the city,
said Ron Bowman, vice president of Corix Utilities, which was
contracted to replace all conventional electricity meters across the
province by the end of 2012.
Prince George, Richmond, Surrey and Abbotsford will be among the
first communities to have the meters installed.
"We have [approximately] 104,000 meters to install in the North,"
Bowman said. "Our initial installation will be in Prince George,
starting in central Prince George."
Crews will likely begin moving into smaller communities in the region
starting in spring next year, he added.
Currently the company is undertaking training, testing and quality
assurance, Bowman said.
Murphy said the new meters are capable of minute-to-minute, two-way
communication using radio waves.
"If the existing meters are equivalent to an old rotary-dial phone,
then smart meters are a Blackberry," Murphy said. "If you lose power,
the smart meter will call B.C. Hydro and tell us you've lost power.
When the power comes back on, it'll let us know."
The $930 million project is expected to generate a net benefit of
$520 million over 20 years, Murphy said.
Approximately 80 per cent of that benefit will be in the form of
greater operational efficiency - such as reduced meter reading costs, he said.
"The second area will be in energy conservation," Murphy said.
"Through a web portal customers will have the ability to monitor
their power usage."
The web site, which is projected to be online early next year, will
allow B.C. Hydro customers to view their power consumption in real time.
The meters will also make it easier to detect power theft, he said.
B.C. Hydro projects up to $732 million in power theft, primarily by
marijuana grow operations, could be prevented by the smart meters.
"If someone tampers with the meter, to try to take it off the wall
and bypass it, we would get a signal at B.C. Hydro," Murphy said.
"[And] the smart meters working in conjunction with other meters
we're installing at the same time will allow us to determine if the
power usage isn't matching up with household use."
If the electricity flowing through the distribution lines exceeds the
amount being recorded by the smart meters, "we'll be able to locate
that pretty quickly," Murphy said.
B.C. Hydro customers will receive a notice in the mail when
installers are working in their area. Installers will be wearing a
uniform and carrying photo ID identifying them as Corix employees.
Before installing the smart meter, the installer will knock on the
door to tell the resident or business operators what they are doing.
The process takes approximately 10 minutes and involves a short
disruption of power.
"The whole job is really quite simple," Murphy said.
For on B.C. Hydro's smart meter program, go online to www.bchydro.com
A new BC Hydro smart metering program is proving a boon for Prince
George as contractor Corix Utilities sets up shop in the city to
switch more than 100,000 northern B.C. metering devices.
The initiative also promises to be a source of great savings for the
province and a headache for marijuana grow operators, said B.C. Hydro
smart meter project manager Gary Murphy.
Prince George is the new northern base of operations for the new
smart metering program recently initiated for the entire province.
As contractors begin installing approximately 40,000 new devices in
Prince George later this month, 23 employees, including a regional
manager, warehouse staff and installers will be based in the city,
said Ron Bowman, vice president of Corix Utilities, which was
contracted to replace all conventional electricity meters across the
province by the end of 2012.
Prince George, Richmond, Surrey and Abbotsford will be among the
first communities to have the meters installed.
"We have [approximately] 104,000 meters to install in the North,"
Bowman said. "Our initial installation will be in Prince George,
starting in central Prince George."
Crews will likely begin moving into smaller communities in the region
starting in spring next year, he added.
Currently the company is undertaking training, testing and quality
assurance, Bowman said.
Murphy said the new meters are capable of minute-to-minute, two-way
communication using radio waves.
"If the existing meters are equivalent to an old rotary-dial phone,
then smart meters are a Blackberry," Murphy said. "If you lose power,
the smart meter will call B.C. Hydro and tell us you've lost power.
When the power comes back on, it'll let us know."
The $930 million project is expected to generate a net benefit of
$520 million over 20 years, Murphy said.
Approximately 80 per cent of that benefit will be in the form of
greater operational efficiency - such as reduced meter reading costs, he said.
"The second area will be in energy conservation," Murphy said.
"Through a web portal customers will have the ability to monitor
their power usage."
The web site, which is projected to be online early next year, will
allow B.C. Hydro customers to view their power consumption in real time.
The meters will also make it easier to detect power theft, he said.
B.C. Hydro projects up to $732 million in power theft, primarily by
marijuana grow operations, could be prevented by the smart meters.
"If someone tampers with the meter, to try to take it off the wall
and bypass it, we would get a signal at B.C. Hydro," Murphy said.
"[And] the smart meters working in conjunction with other meters
we're installing at the same time will allow us to determine if the
power usage isn't matching up with household use."
If the electricity flowing through the distribution lines exceeds the
amount being recorded by the smart meters, "we'll be able to locate
that pretty quickly," Murphy said.
B.C. Hydro customers will receive a notice in the mail when
installers are working in their area. Installers will be wearing a
uniform and carrying photo ID identifying them as Corix employees.
Before installing the smart meter, the installer will knock on the
door to tell the resident or business operators what they are doing.
The process takes approximately 10 minutes and involves a short
disruption of power.
"The whole job is really quite simple," Murphy said.
For on B.C. Hydro's smart meter program, go online to www.bchydro.com
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