Thursday, September 30, 2010

Belkin Offers 'Smart' Router For Smart Meters


Belkin on Thursday introduced a router capable of offering real-time information and advice on home energy use via a Web interface.

The Conserve Gateway router connects with a home's existing smart meter, but is not just an overview of the energy usage for the home. It can be used to monitor and control specific devices and appliances hooked into the home network. It operates via Wi-Fi or Ethernet as a standalone router, or can tie into an existing broadband router, and also has an antenna for ZigBee communication.

The Belkin router software, which like many routers is Web accessible, also provides suggestions for saving energy based on a detailed analysis of the specific habits of the home it's connected to.

Belkin research showed that the average consumer was not as interested in knowing about their kilowatt-hours, but rather the bottom line of cost and conserving energy.

So they designed the interface software to be user-friendly and subtle. The tips, for example, include things like the dollar amount one might save if usage habits for a clothes dryer were modified.

"Our system, from the friendly design language of the Gateway to the tone of our user interface, is like a friendly doctor. We want to encourage good health and keep you focused on healthy behavior going forward. There's no sense in yelling at you after you've eaten a bacon double cheeseburger. Let's focus on the future," Kevin Ashton, Belkin Conserve's general manager, said in a statement.

The router augments Belkin's existing Conserve line of gadgets designed to help consumers reduce the amount of electricity that gets sucked down by their electronics. The Conserve Smart AV power strip shuts off stand-by power to things like DVD players in addition to offering the usual surge protection, while still including two always-open plugs. The Conserve Valet is a charger for cell phones and media devices that cuts power to a device once it's fully charged.

But while many products in the Conserve line-up are available for retail purchase, the Conserve Gateway is currently only being offered to utilities. Consumers would receive the router as part of a package along with their smart meter through their utility company. It is not currently available for consumer purchase, according to Belkin.


Read more: http://news.cnet.com/8301-11128_3-20018139-54.html?tag=mncol;title#ixzz112yQHgKx

Monday, September 27, 2010

Green iPhone 4 Case: The EcoShield+


Alas, going green always seems to cost a little extra, and at $39.99, Agent 18's EcoShield+ iPhone 4 case borders on the exorbitant.

That "+" stands for the nifty integrated kickstand, and while the case is expensive, we did check out a sample, and have to say that it's really pretty nice. Agent 18 also makes the same case witout a kickstand for $5 less, but we think that added feature helps distinguish the case--and it does come in handy.

So what makes this black case green? Well, Agent 18 promises that it uses one recycled plastic bottle in every case it makes. You'd think that would make the case cheaper, but alas, no.


Read more: http://news.cnet.com/8301-17938_105-20017706-1.html?tag=mncol;title#ixzz10lfXxnxg

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Power Assure Box Manages Power In Data Center

Data center start-up Power Assure today launched a system for reducing wasted energy in corporate data centers and announced that energy conglomerate ABB is an investor.
The Santa Clara, Calif.-based company has developed a system that scales back power usage of data centers' servers based on the computing load. By fine-tuning power management, the company says that it can cut energy costs by about 50 percent.


Peaks and valleys: Power Assure says its system matches power output with computing demand.
(Credit: Power Assure)

The system includes an appliance that goes into the data center and a hosted application which analyzes operational information from a data center, explained founder and chief technology officer Clemens Pfeiffer.

The application tracks computing demand and, if demand is slow, the system will start to lower power consumption of servers by turning off fans or throttling their usage, Pfeiffer explained. The application also reads data from systems management applications to make sure that too many servers aren't being turned off and that service levels are still being met.

Data center operators are trying a number of techniques to lower energy use and there are a number of applications to track energy usage. But most power-management software systems are mainly geared at reporting and visualization of energy data, rather than automation, said Jack Norris, the vice president of marketing at Power Assure. NASA is one of its customers.

The venture arm of ABB, which makes power equipment for utilities and other energy companies, will invest $1.5 million in PowerAssure. Having ABB as an investor will help PowerAssure's engineering and expansion to global markets, the company said. The company has raised $20.25 million in funding to date, including $5 million from the Department of Energy.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

U.S. Navy Buys 20,000 Gallons Of Algae Fuel


Algae biofuel producer Solazyme announced Wednesday it's delivered 20,000 gallons of algae-based shipboard fuel to the U.S. Navy.

Solazyme's Soladiesel Renewable Naval Distillate fuel will go toward the Navy's ambitious goal of getting 50 percent of its energy from renewable resources by 2020.
But algae fuel is not just useful for the Navy's ships.

This past summer Solazyme also delivered 1,500 gallons of algae-based jet fuel to the U.S. Navy for testing. If testing goes well, Solazyme's algae-based advance biofuel could be powering some of our nation's military aircraft.

The company has also signed a contract with the Department of Defense to deliver an additional 150,000 gallons of algae-derived advanced biofuel by 2011.

In addition to garnering more military contracts, the company also raised $52 million in series D funding in August, and counts Morgan Stanley and the Chevron's venture arm among its investors.

It's clear to see why the U.S. Navy is interested in incorporating American-made alternative fuel into its energy plan.

In 2009 the not-for-profit Center for Naval Analyses issued a report signed by 12 former U.S. generals and admirals that concluded the U.S. military's dependence on not only foreign oil, but also natural gas and an unreliable electrical grid, is jeopardizing U.S. national security.

The report asserted that much of the fuel purchased by the U.S. military was essentially a transfer of wealth to countries associated with terrorism, and, therefore, the U.S. was indirectly financing both sides of the terrorist conflict. It recommended increased use of alternative fuels and electric vehicles, which the Department of Defense had already been actively pursuing, as part of a proposed solution.

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

ZigBee Alliance Coordinating Vehicle-To-Grid Technology


What will happen when millions of electric vehicles plug into the grid at at the same time? If ZigBee Alliance's blueprints for the SmartGrid go according to plan, not much.

The ugly specter of mass blackouts caused by hoards of EVs rolling into garages and plugging in at the same time is just one of the many arguments EV detractors use against electric vehicles and plug-ins. But EV adoption is inevitable, and the smart grid should make sure that energy loads will be balanced and shifted as needed to recharge them without causing widespread power failure. And eventually, ZigBee predicts, electric cars and plug-ins will become part of the energy solution supplying power to the grid.

But let's back up.

If you haven't heard of the ZigBee Alliance, you're not alone. Before I started this article, I'd never heard of it until I was forwarded one of its press releases. Named after a little-known Nordic elf that has nothing to do with wireless networks or energy, the ZigBee is a standard for wireless sensor networks on which the Smart Grid operates. "And the domain name was available," says Bob Heile, who is chairman of the curiously named group and one of the founders of 802.11.

More than 300 metering, computer, chip processing, electronics, and automotive companies are members the ZigBee Alliance. By incorporating ZigBee's technology in their products, many of these companies are laying the infrastructure that will enable utility companies, networked homes and buildings, and appliances to communicate wirelessly and automate metering as part of the smart grid. That includes electric vehicles.

Electric and plug-in vehicles will undoubtedly be a significant drain on the smart grid--each plugged-in EV has the equivalent drain of another house for hours at a time. But they're also uniquely designed to be able to give back.

"They are essentially batteries with wheels," says Heile. "Ultimately, long after the EV infrastructure is in place and consumers adopt them, there will be opportunities to load shift."

This means that at peak hours people can sell the energy stored in EV batteries back to utility companies. But don't think you can offset the cost of a new Nissan Leaf or Chevrolet Volt by becoming a homespun energy trader of sorts--that technology is still years away.

The typical EV and smart meter rhetoric goes something like, "You can charge your car overnight when electricity rates are cheaper." But the technology isn't entirely there to support that rational. Right now if you don't own a smart meter (you would know if you do) and you plug an EV into an outlet, it doesn't know what the device is or who it belongs to, or when to charge it other than right now. But in the future, it will know who you are by the car you drive so that when you charge at a friend's house, you'll get the bill. Or so the theory goes.

Specifications for vehicle-to-grid technology are still being developed by the Society of Automotive Engineers as part of the ZigBee Alliance's Smart Grid Interoperability roadmap. Coulomb Technology's ChargePoint Stations, which Heile describes as "first generation or first and a half generation equipment," are able to identify users, but the charging stations aren't yet equipped with ZigBee Alliance's smart meter technology that is required to load shift, says Heile. However, ChargePoint Stations are equipped with the features that would enable vehicle-to-grid technology once the specifications are in place and automotive manufacturers get on board.

For the moment, there's no urgent need. Roughly speaking, the U.S. can handle 2 million electric vehicles before a management system is required. "After that, it's grid crippling," says Heile.

This is not to say that after the 2 millionth vehicle rolls off the factory line that all transformers will break. That number is an estimate--the real breaking point will vary by geographic area and how many additional loads a electric plant can take at peak without busting transformers. A typical plant might be able to handle a 10 percent load increase, but definitely not 50 percent, explains Heile.

Especially since not everyone will recharge their EV only at night--some portion of EV drivers are going to need to recharge at peak hours. Managing those needs will require the cooperation of everyone. Smart grid technology expects that in the future people will program in when and how they want to recharge their car instead of everyone charging at the same time.

"It's going to give priority to the vehicles that need to charge first," says Heile.
It will also price energy according to supply and demand. If you have an important trip and need to be able to leave at 9 p.m., you will have to pay peak power rates just as if you are running low on gas--you will pay whatever the rate is of the nearest station because you don't have the luxury of shopping around.

But ZigBee Alliance's specifications aren't all about making drivers feel the power pinch--the same technology that will enable you to recharge your car according to pricing and scheduling will enable you to decide when to sell the energy back. Another feature of the vehicle-to-home network capability is that you could even run your home appliances off your car. If you decide that energy rates are too expensive midday on a Saturday during a heat wave, you can run your air conditioning off your Volt.

Although ZigBee technology is being installed in 40 million meters in North America, automatic metering infrastructure is still some time away. How quickly it becomes a reality is tied to how popular electric vehicles become.

"California will be an early adopter," says Heile, "but it will be a while before you see consistent infrastructure. It's sort of like the re-electrificaiton of America--it's not going to happen overnight."