MIAMI, Fla. —
Over the next two years, the City of Miami and some heavy-hitting business partners are going to overhaul the city's electrical grid.
Mayor Manny Diaz today unveiled an ambitious, $200 million "Energy Smart Miami" smart grid project developed in partnership with General Electric, Cisco Systems, Florida Power & Light and Silver Spring Networks to deploy smart meters on every home and most businesses in Miami-Dade County.
"This begins the transformation of Miami into the first truly smart-grid system in the nation," Diaz said during a press conference announcing the launch. "It is a model that supports and embodies the goals of the stimulus bill."
The project, which aims to land stimulus bill funding for as much as half the project, will create as many as 1,000 new jobs as it brings next-generation technology to homes and businesses. In addition to smart meters, the project aims to install solar power systems on several schools and universities, add 300 plug-in hybrid vehicles to the city's fleet, and bring a series of new technologies like home energy use dashboards, smart appliances and smart-meter thermostats to pilot programs in 1,000 city homes.
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"It's really the biggest commercialization of smart-grid technology," Jeff Immelt, GE's CEO, told Forbes today. "It's going to allow for better embracing of renewable technology. It's going to reduce [carbon dioxide], and it's going to create jobs."
Energy Smart Miami piggybacks on a series of already planned upgrades to the Miami area electric grid that has been in the works from FPL and California-based Silver Spring Networks. In the new project, GE will provide one million smart meters to the project, with the potential to upgrade to 4.5 million, enough to cover FPL's entire customer base in Miami-Dade. Silver Spring Networks will provide the technology to link those smart meters, and Cisco is spearheading the in-home smart devices and home dashboards in 1,000 residences.
Smart grid technologies are rapidly accelerating as the U.S. makes moves toward a low-carbon economy. Last fall, GE and Google teamed up to lobby the federal government for support for the smart grid, while last week developers announced Babcock Ranch, Fla., would become the first solar-powered city in the U.S., and would adopt smart grid technologies to manage energy use in the city.
More details about the project are online at http://www.energysmartmiami.com.
Miami photo CC-licensed by Flickr user dgilmalle.


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GE warehouse building in Miami
GE owns a couple of warehouse buildings here in Miami that are being renovated. But, they have not made mention of anything specific that it would be considered part of this project. We have 180,000 sq. ft. of warehouse space with 36 units. Property is located near Miami International Airport.
Ed, Miami
www.edwardredlich.com
Math doesn't make sense
Either the 1,000 new jobs will pay $ 2,000 each (are these temporary or permanent jobs?) or each new meter installation will cost $ 2,000. Considering that conventional "advanced" meters are less than $100 each, this seems an absurd price. Either way, neither scenario makes sense.
SmartGrid shouldn't mean dumb spending. Perhaps the reporter is mathematically challenged?
Why not spend that $200M on clean power generation ...
Because Miami already has clean power facilities.
Miami calls in Turkey Point Nuclear Facility.
Forbes calls Miami the Cleanest City in the US.
http://www.forbes.com/2008/03/17/miami-seattle-orlando-biz-logistics-cx_...
How is this smart?
It looks to me like they are spending $200M on "Smart" meters that nobody cares about.
Why not spend all of that 200M on clean power generation facilities instead?
For those who are interested...
You can learn about Google's efforts here:
http://www.google.org/powermeter/index.html
They do a pretty good job of explaining how this technology will be useful.
This also lays the ground work for intelligent appliances that can talk to each other or the grid to only use energy when it makes the most sense.
People do actually care about these smart meters.
If you are truly interested in learning about our future green economy, please check out Hot, Flat & Crowded by Thomas Friedman. It makes a very compelling argument for supporting these initiatives.
Jobs?
How many jobs will these Smart Meters eliminate? Smart Meters communicate energy consumption and allow the power company to turn power on and off all through text message. Its great technology and makes a lot of sense, but lets not say we are creating 1000 new jobs (that will most likely be temporary until meters are installed) when at the same time we are eliminating jobs.
Stupid Article
The word Smart seems to be the buzzword used in this article, but there is no explanation of what the smart-grid will do, what the smart-meter will accomplish and what the smart-devices / smart-thermostat will regulate. Just another intellectually challenged reporter with an empty article, sprinkling in buzzwords to appear 'smart'.
How is this smart?
It looks to me like they are spending $200M on "Smart" meters that nobody cares about.
Why not spend all of that 200M on clean power generation facilities instead?