3. U.S. DOE Smart Grid Investment Grants Geographic coverage U.S. Department of Energy
4. U.S. DOE Smart Grid Investment Grants The numbers … SGIG Topic Areas 18 million Smart meters 1.2 million In-home display units 206,000 Smart transformers 177,000 Load control devices 170,000 Smart thermostats 877 Networked phasor measurement units 671 Automated substations 100 PEV charging stations Category $ Million Integrated/ Crosscutting 2,150 AMI 818 Distribution 254 Transmission 148 Customer Systems 32 Manufacturing 26 Total 3,429
6. Smart grid industry involvement CEC PIER = California Energy Commission's Public Interest Energy Research program; CERTS = Consortium for Electric Reliability Technology Solutions; CPUC = California Public Utilities Commission; DOE-OE = U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Electricity Delivery and Energy Reliability; DV 2010 = Distribution Vision 2010; EEI = Edison Electric Institute; EPRI = Electric Power Research Institute; FERC = Federal Energy Regulatory Commission; GWAC = GridWise Architecture Council; NERC = North American Electric Reliability Corporation; NYSERDA = New York State Energy Research and Development Authority; PSERC = Power Systems Engineering Research Center NIST IEEE 2030
10. NIST SGIP stakeholder categories 1 Appliance and consumer electronics providers 2 Commercial and industrial equipment manufacturers and automation vendors 3 Consumers – residential, commercial and industrial 4 Electric transportation industry stakeholders 5 Electric utility companies – Investor Owned Utilities (IOU) and publicly owned utilities 6 Electric utility companies - municipal (MUNI) 7 Electric utility companies - Rural Electric Association (REA) 8 Electricity and financial market traders (includes aggregators) 9 Independent power producers 10 Information and communication technologies (ICT) infrastructure and service providers 11 Information technology (IT) application developers and integrators 12 Power equipment manufacturers and vendors 13 Professional societies, users groups, trade associations and industry consortia 14 R&D organizations and academia 15 Relevant federal government agencies 16 Renewable power producers 17 Retail service providers 18 Standard and specification Development Organizations (SDOs) 19 State and local regulators 20 Testing and certification vendors 21 Transmission operators and Independent System Operators (ISOs) 22 Venture capital
11. NIST priority action plans # Priority Action Plans Target Date 0 Meter Upgradability Done – Oct 2009 1 Guidelines for use of Internet Protocol suite in the Smart Grid mid-year 2010 2 Guidelines for use of wireless communications in the Smart Grid mid-year 2010 3 Common specification for price and product definition January 2010 4 Common scheduling mechanism for energy transactions December 2009 5 Standard meter data profiles Year-end 2010 6 Demonstrate common semantic model translations for end device data 7 Electric storage interconnection guidelines mid-year 2010
12. PAPs (continued) # Priority Action Plans Target Date 8 Common information model for distribution grid management Year-end 2010 9 Standard demand response signals January 2010 10 Standard energy use information early 2010 11 Interoperability standards to support plug-in electric vehicles Year-end 2010 12 IEC 61850 Objects / DNP3 Mapping 2010 13 Time synchronization, IEC 61850 Objects/IEEE C37.118 Harmonization mid-year 2010 14 Transmission and distribution power systems models mapping Year-end 2010 15 Harmonization of Power Line Carrier (PLC) standards for the home new