Energy Australia explores network tie-up with NBN Co

 

Two of Australia's biggest network providers collaborate on the last mile to the home.

Energy Australia was keen for the emergent $43 billion National Broadband Network Company to step up to become utilities' gateway to households and businesses, its managing director said.

George Maltabarow told delegates to the IQPC Smart Grids Forum that the NSW Government-owned power and gas company was in discussions with NBN Co to merge the "last-mile" interests of the two network providers.

"We both have a common interest in that we're looking to last-mile solutions," Maltabarow said.

"They're looking for last mile for termination from their fibre network and perhaps some entry to the household network; there conceptually are synergies there.

"We're exploring this idea of a gateway to the household and whether NBN can provide a gateway for power utilities, telecommunications companies and other service providers on an open-access basis is something we're exploring with them."

The utility's general manager for intelligent networks, Adrian Clark, believed it justified the case for a national smart meter rollout in Australia.

"I think that there's a real synergy for smart metering and the NBN to get together," Clark said.

"The NBN needs smart metering or needs the utility industry as much as the utility industry needs the NBN.

"There's a whole industry out there that needs to put an [optical network terminal gateway] at every single house in Australia. We need to put a smart meter at every single house in Australia. And we also need to justify our smart metering business case.

"I believe that there's cost savings in providing a smart metering rollout that addresses the NBN requirements. [This strategy also] helps put the smart metering business case beyond doubt into positive territory."

Clark said Energy Australia had held a "number of positive dialogues" with the senior NBN Co team.

But he was concerned about how receptive NBN Co was to combining forces.

"I am a little bit disappointed [that] the NBN is approaching a lot of us as utilities thinking access provider - we want access to your infrastructure," he said.

"They're not actually thinking about the synergies I've put forward [at parliamentary hearings into smart grid infrastructure]."

Clark believed NBN Co's view was partly driven by the its heavy workload: "We're just one requirement on their radar".

He called on the electricity industry to unite to raise the profile of smart metering with NBN Co.

"It's really having a common focal spear point for us as an industry into the NBN to them aware of our requirements," Clark said.

"That's the process of engagement moving forwardLet's face it - we're the best people to identify our requirements, not the broader industry.

We need to have a consistent voice rather than dealing with all 15 [electricity] distributors."

The forum continues today.


Energy Australia explores network tie-up with NBN Co
"@mick09 The Age got it wrong. The moratorium is for time-of-use charges not the smart meter rollout that continues. Here's the press release http://premier.vic.gov.au/newsro..."
By nate.cochrane
 
 
 
Comments: 8
horst
Mar 24, 2010 7:58 PM
from horst in wollongong
o no,and than get a bill for $350 and have no control
over the new bloody power meter installed,sending information back to the power company,like it was carried out in victoria ! ask the people of victoria how happy they are !
geeeeee........
mick09
Mar 25, 2010 2:21 AM
Victorian Energy and Resources Minister Peter Batchelor has announced a moratorium on the roll out of smart meters across the state. 23 March 2010. Did anyone tell NSW?
pbut
Mar 25, 2010 9:26 AM
Mick09, Victoria is not stopping the installation of smart meters. The Moratorium is only on the TOU tariff not the smart meter rollout.
rycrozier
Mar 25, 2010 10:11 AM
@pbut - the distinction seemed to get a bit lost in the articles I read about it :-)
peterh_oz
Mar 25, 2010 10:40 AM
The quicker we all get smart meters, the quicker we can stop building earth-killing power stations. Then people can choose whether to use expensive peak power or not! We might even SAVE money if we switch to offpeak for power-hungry items.
anonymous
Mar 25, 2010 4:29 PM

Pity that Australia allowed itself to get turned off nuclear power a generation ago by the professional political pollyannas. We could have had a network of secure base-load stations operating by now with little need for smart meters or unreliable ancilliary power sources.

Unless perhaps you factor in the chronic incompetence of the state govts, in which case probably anything goes.
.
mick09
Mar 25, 2010 10:31 PM
Melbourne Age reports an "indefinite moratorium" with "no indication as to how long the moratorium might last". A politically acceptable compromise? Not to embarrass Chairman Rudd's claim that the NBN would reduce carbon emissions by 5%.

@anon "professional political pollyannas" would seem to pretty accurately describe the key players in this sorry saga.
nate.cochrane
Mar 29, 2010 10:39 AM
@mick09 The Age got it wrong. The moratorium is for time-of-use charges not the smart meter rollout that continues.
Here's the press release
http://premier.vic.gov.au/newsroom/9853.html
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