Report says range of energy-feedback tools will cut power use

by Rebecca Walker — July 7, 2010—Utilities need to go beyond the smart meter and use a range of energy-feedback tools to achieve significant reductions in customers’ power consumption and their electricity bills, new research shows.

In a new report, the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy estimates that U.S. households could cut their electricity use by as much as 12 percent and save as much as $35 billion over the next 20 years. That is if customers have context for the data that advanced metering can provide, they are shown how they can slash their power use and costs, and they are sufficiently motivated to change, according to the report.

“The bottom line here is very simple: Smart meters in and of themselves are just not ‘smart’ enough to get the job done for consumers and our economy,” said John A. “Skip” Laitner, the council’s director of Economic and Social Analysis. “While advanced metering provides a useful tool to save energy, cut consumer electric bills and reduce greenhouse gas emissions from power plants, utilities need to use these advanced meters to provide consumers with information on their consumption in ways that grab consumers’ attention and encourage them to take action,” Laitner said in a statement.

By the end of 2008, 6.7 million advanced meters had been deployed among commercial, industrial and residential customers in 19 states, the ACEEE report said. At the time, just 4.7 percent of all residential meters were advanced devices.

This year, the study said, the typical American household will spend about $1,500 for the electricity and natural gas. That household is also likely to use 20 percent to 30 percent more energy than necessary.