View our Product Guide
Electronic House Newsletter   View sample
 
Popular Stories
View Home of the Year '09.
Recent Comments
MySpace Music Players (11/21, 12:54 AM)
balunov21 (11/20, 08:59 PM)
james (11/20, 06:48 PM)
sherry coleman (11/20, 02:44 PM)
Crow (11/20, 11:26 AM)
Recent Slideshow Galleries
9 Green (and Great!) TVs Paris Theme Illuminates Home Theater 20 Great Looking Racks DIYer Spends 3 Years Researching Theater 6 Products to Watch for in November The Holiday Gift Guide 2009 20 Leading Flat-Panel TVs 10 Manliest Man Caves The Best Blu-ray Releases of November 7 More Wiring Nightmares Inside Halloween Park’s Haunted House 16 Scary DVDs We’re Waiting for on Blu-ray 17 Scary Blu-rays for Halloween Careful Planning Keeps 12K-Square-Foot Home Running Smoothly N.Y. Yankees Pitchers Dig Home Theater Drastic Theater Reconfiguration Includes Hiding Bay Window
Info and Answers Feature
7 Ways to Slay Your Power Vampires
7 Ways to Slay Your Power Vampires
Standby power wastes energy and money, but there are easy ways to save.

Themed Home Theaters
View Designing a Death Star Theater
Designing a Death Star Home Theater
Three separate rooms, one starfield, and a life-sized Han Solo are just a few of the things that help two super "Star Wars" fans get their geek on in this theater.

Site Sections
Services
Info and Answers
GE, Tendril Team for Smart Grid Appliances
GE and Tendril to create money-saving, networked appliances. When will we see them?
July 09, 2009 | by Steven Castle

In our smart grid future, we’ll see smart appliances that can shut off when an electric utility reaches peak capacity. That will save us money on increased time-of-use rates. And this will happen.

But what about even smarter appliances that give us options, like whether to delay that dish washing until later at night when the rates go down, or still dry your clothes, but at a lower power level?

GE says it could bring such appliances to the market by the end of the year. To do so, GE has partnered with Tendril, a smart grid start-up that has developed a home-based energy management system called the Tendril Residential Energy Ecosystem (TREE) that will allow GE’s smart appliances to communicate over a broadband or smart meter network.

Tendril’s Energy Management System

Tendril’s TREE provides integration to any wireless ZigBee-equipped Smart Energy-certified product for the home. It uses a display and gateway that plugs into an existing Internet router. Tendril says the devices are smart enough to find each other and the electric meter to form a home network. Users can then log into the consumer portal from a computer to monitor their energy consumption. For now, TREE is available only through utilities running pilot programs, but Tendril says it is looking into offering direct-to-consumer products as well.

For GE’s smart appliances, Tendril’s TREE system will provide processing for security information exchanges with the utility and real-time information like variable rate pricing, so the appliance can run, be turned off, or run at a lower power state depending on the electric rate, for instance.

One TREE configuration can work with a one-way meter that can be read by drive-bys RF and which are on many houses. A device located in the home reads the meter, sends that information via wireless ZigBee radio frequency to a processor that plugs into your Internet router, so you can see your consumption on a computer. The other configuration requires a two-way smart meter that can send home electricity usage data back to an electric utility. Utilities have incentives to reduce electrical demand during peak load periods, typically from 3 pm to 8 pm when people come home and use electricity — especially in the summer when air conditioners are fired up. (And in the future when electric cars are charged.)

Varied pricing of electricity, depending on the time of day, is likely to be implemented by many utilities to recover the costs of buying extra power and to encourage people to save energy during these periods. That’s where smart grid technology comes in, likely using demand-side management, also called demand response, in which the utilities can shut off or power down home appliances in exchange for rate savings.


Tendril provides consumers with Web access to see and compare electricity usage.

Smart Grid Appliances of the Future

Here are some of the smart appliances we could see:

  • A refrigerator that delays the defrost cycle during peak periods and goes into energy-saving mode
  • A microwave that reduces wattage used when operated during peak hours
  • A “smart” dishwasher that can delay starting the cycle to off peak times
  • Smart clothes dryer that reduces its power use by 50 percent during peak load periods
  • A hybrid electric hot water heater (which also absorbs heat in ambient air and transfers it into the water) that reduces power requirements by up to 80 percent

“Our goal is to give the consumer control. For example, a smart dishwasher will give you the option to delay the cycle,” says GE spokesperson Kim Freeman. “A lot of appliances can turn on or off, but what we want to do is not disrupt people’s lifestyles.”

Smart appliances with ZigBee or another communications technology will certainly be priced with a premium, which Freeman expects to be similar to the difference between Energy Star-rated and non-Energy Star-rated products.

And although this technology is available now … er … we can’t have it yet. “We really need to wait for time-of-use pricing before we start distributing products,” says Freeman. “It’s a chicken and egg thing. We’re ready and we have the technology.”



About the Author:
Steven Castle - Contributing Writer
Steven Castle is a writer, editor, and humorist who recently completed Filthy Rich Things, a savage satire on our thirst for success and wealth. He is presently expanding his magazine work by writing more about alternative energy sources and green building.



Article Topics
Popular Tags
Social Bookmark   less


Comments (6) Most recent displayed first.
Posted by Miami limousine service  on  11/07/09  at  05:10 AM

water car is really a nice idea. but i heard that those cars run only in soft water and not in hard water. most of countries struggle a lot for soft water. what they will do.
Miami limousine service

Posted by donaa  on  10/31/09  at  01:49 AM

“A lot of appliances can turn on or off, but what we want to do is not disrupt people’s lifestyles.”Second Hand Cars

Posted by jack  on  10/25/09  at  06:49 AM

great strategic complement to GE’s suite of ecomagination and smart grid investments and products, with multiple commercial and technology development opportunities for collaboration,answering service outsourcing

Posted by Michale  on  09/08/09  at  02:12 AM

The Association of Home Appliance Manufacturers (AHAM) this week submitted to NIST a collection of recommendations for Smart Grid standards. The principles were developed by AHAM’s Smart Grid Task Force and describe how appliances fit into home area network connected to the Smart Grid.  Among the principles enunciated are statements that the standards should be open; that initially some appliance systems and standards may support one-way communication, but that next generation appliances should support two-way communication; that the smart appliance will maintain control of how it responds, but the consumer should always be able to override a power-reduction command.
water power car

Posted by Martimr1  on  09/02/09  at  01:30 PM

Well, to be fair to the smart dishwasher - on that, the buttons would be more like:

* Wash immediately or
* Clean by morning

If you chose the latter, the cycle could be optimized to run during minimum energy demand, even if the homeowner doesn’t know when that is.


+ View all comments on for this article



Post a Comment

Name:

Email:


View comment guidelines

Remember my personal information

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Please answer the question below:

Type the 4th letter of the word "theater":





Learn more about products and solutions from tech companies.
Electronic House magazine's 2009 Best Homes of the Year special.
Electronic House reviews the coolest products of the year.
Visit the Electronic House Ideas store & get more out of your home!

Stay up-to-date with home electronics. Get your print subscription today.
Weekly email offers tips, info and product news.
Subscribe today!
Get the content that's important to you.
More about RSS.
Electronic House is now available in a digital edition. Learn more.
About us Advertise Magazine Newsletters Digital issues EH Publishing Privacy policy Contact us
 Copyright © 2006 EH Publishing. All rights reserved.
EH Network: CE Pro TecHome Builder ChannelPro ProSoundWeb Church Production Electronic House Expo Worship Facilities Expo