Friday, December 19, 2008

How Fast Can Smart-Grid Jobs
Be Created Under Obama Plan?

Can the smart grid provide jobs quickly based on existing technology that will be flexible to adapt
to the innovations of tomorrow?

That’s a question raised by Patti Harper-Slaboszewicz, director of advanced metering and meter-data management at energy researcher and consultancy UtiliPoint International, who has analyzed comments made by the top nominees of President-elect Obama’s energy team. In her analysis posted on UtiliPoint’s website. Harper-Slatoszewicz says she’s aware of at least 100 projects far enough along to produce jobs at all levels, entry-level workers to manufacturing to professional. She writes:
Some of these projects may be in limbo waiting for confirmation that the project fits the description of the transformation to green energy and sustainability that the energy team is looking for. Smart metering projects, for example, need meter installers, appointment schedulers, manufacturing, project managers, software, software integrators, customer service training, marketing, network design and installation, computer hardware, uniforms, and more. Projects typically take four to five years to roll out, resulting in positions that would carry employees past the economic recovery period.
Smart meters don’t stand alone, and need an energy Internet with IT smarts to function. As Harper-Slatoszewicz notes:
Smart metering and the associated back office systems and hardware support innovative energy pricing that marry energy efficiency with demand response, allowing customers to reduce peak energy use and conserve energy, resulting in a reduction of green house gases, lower costs, and postponing or avoiding the need to build peaking plants that are only used 100 to 200 hours per year during seasonal demand or during an unexpected outage due to equipment issues.

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