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General Electric Deal Paves Way For More Tiered Energy Pricing

By Chris Morrison | Jul 8, 2009

As one of the world’s largest appliance makers, anything General Electric does will certainly catch the market’s attention. Now, with a startup called Tendril, it’s bringing energy demand software to refrigerators, dishwashers and other power-hungry equipment, a move that could eventually have big effects for electrical utilities.

Tendril’s business involves a lot of communications IP, but all consumers should see is a little screen on their device listing energy prices and giving a few options. If electricity prices are high and whatever you’re doing can wait (washing a load of clothes, for instance), you can push a button for automatic operation, and the washer will turn on when prices have gone down.

It’s a tough job getting consumers to care much about electricity prices, so the point is only partially about getting people to act. The other part is allowing appliances to modify their own operation based on information from the utility, or letting utilities directly affect them. Thus, if power usage is spiking, either the equipment can temporarily go into low-power mode, or the utility, if facing a blackout, can turn it off.

Not every utility changes pricing based on time of day and usage at the moment, but the spread of appliances like GE’s are an open invitation for more of them to do so.

How much of an affect this will have may depend on whether consumers get in the habit of paying attention to energy management like the ones Tendril makes. If they do, energy demand from both homes and businesses could be cut significantly, especially in areas that are especially hot or cold, as heating and cooling will certainly become part of the trend as well.

But even if consumers overlook the new options, there will be room for plenty of energy efficiency improvements. This could be the first step to cutting energy use around the country, which is now a significant component of the climate bill now facing Senate.

Depending on how widespread and sophisticated energy management hardware becomes, it could even be used by utilities to deal with some new problems, like wind power’s intermittency. But how much energy management is capable of will only become apparent gradually; especially in the current economy, there’s no great rush to buy new appliances.

Chris Morrison, a reporter on energy, renewables and climate change, is the former lead cleantech writer for VentureBeat. Follow him on Twitter.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • GE, Tendril ink deal to create even better home energy management

    VentureBeat - 122 days 16 hours 24 minutes ago

    General Electric’s Consumer & Industrial division finalized a deal with home energy management startup Tendril today to improve broadband communication between demand response appliances in the home, smart meters and utilities. Ideally, the result of this tandem project will be a wide range of appliances that respond automatically to utility...

  • GE brings smart grids to life as appliances gain support

    Ars Technica - 121 days 6 hours 38 minutes ago

    On Wednesday, manufacturing giant GE announced a partnership with Tendril, a company that provides smart grid software and services. The agreement will see see GE work to incorporate monitoring and reporting capabilities into its consumer appliances and ensure that they communicate properly with Tendril's software. Tendril will focus on...

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    Guardian - 168 days 5 hours 23 minutes ago

    Growing love of computers and plasma TVs could soon account for nearly half our electricity bills Britain's addiction to power-hungry gadgets could raise electricity bills by £100 per year for every household and hamper progress in meeting the country's greenhouse gas emissions targets, according to experts. The proliferation of...

  • GE appliances to connect to smart grid via Tendril

    CNET News - 122 days 16 hours 24 minutes ago

    Imagine a refrigerator smart enough to cut your electricity bills.Smart-grid start-up Tendril and General Electric later this year will test a smart-grid system that will allow GE's networked home appliances to take advantage of cheaper electricity rates, the companies are expected to announce on Wednesday.The joint development deal calls for GE...

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    General Electric has said it could start selling some of its smart appliances — dishwashers, water heaters, microwaves and other devices embedded with communications technology — as early as this summer . But how will those...

 

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