Transcript AMR
SWEMA Spring Meeting 2005 Matt Monroe Program Manager ADI Systems Landis+Gyr Inc 7/16/2015 1 Today’s discussion What is advanced metering The California experience The utility solution set The competing technologies 7/16/2015 2 What is an Advanced Meter? General Questions Demand – TOU - IDR How finely cut does the data need to be? How often does it need to be reported? California AMI – Advance Metering Infrastructure AMI refers to a fixed network AMR system capable of supporting dynamic pricing. Ontario Similar to California where time is critical – CPP Texas? 7/16/2015 3 Where are the Smarts Located? The metrology Four Quadrant TOU IDR meter at every house? Distributed computation not cost effective Local backup, Local display Battery backup? where do we synch? The module Makes up for lack of functionality of meters Drives up cost for supporting multiple vendors The concentrator Limited bandwidth of LAN may not allow this Too much responsibility for such a weak link The host Limited bandwidth in WAN may prevent this No local calculation and limited local display is possible 7/16/2015 4 “The goal is to match your communication network technology choice with your business needs.” 7/16/2015 5 The California experience When is demand response critical High Rates High variability in loads during the day – peaks and valleys High variability in cost of generation during the day Fuel, Generation Shortage Transmission constraints Potential rolling blackouts PUC supports it Neighboring utilities that have these issues PG&E wants to deploy today – announced automation of 5 million electric meters SDG&E wants to move SCE somewhat being pushed along by the PUC and they feel a new design of meter/system is necessary. 7/16/2015 6 Open Standards for Advanced Metering and Demand Response Mission Statement Foster enhanced functionality, lower costs and rapid customer adoption of Advanced Metering networks and Demand Response solutions through the development of a recommended open, standards-based information/data model, reference design and interoperability guidelines Objectives Facilitate the broad adoption of advanced metering and demand response Define what 'open standards' means for advanced metering and demand response Diminish technical and functional risk concerns for utilities, regulators and ratepayers Empower consumers with tools to better understand and manage their energy use Foster industry innovation, efficiency and lower cost solutions 7/16/2015 7 What California wants to see in Advanced Metering Two-way thru to the home Data at the meter for home apps but home interface does not need to go through the meter Time based recording at the meter in case back office is not available Communication module simply provides communication only. All data synchronized at meter All billing determinates at the meter Distributed capabilities in the system Multiple views on how enabling devices interact with meter TOU, IDR, ANSI 12.19 Network Synchs time in the meter Endpoints need to be powered during outage Data available every 6 hours PQ,V, Freq, demand on each leg Distributed Generation detection 4 quadrant, harmonics, kVA 35 days worth of data at meter Load control activation confirmation Two channel bidirectional power measurement IPSec implementation Can’t be a California only solution 7/16/2015 8 The scope for the project is based on providing low-cost, but highly DR functional real-time meters and pricingresponsive thermostats for a typical, low-end 1200 square foot, single-story, California house with two or three small bedrooms and a larger family living space, probably open to the kitchen. Today, the existing meter is on an outside wall of the house, and there is likely to be an old-style, analog thermostat in the family living space. The overall goals are: 1) to create a new DR thermostat that can respond to RTP, e.g., time-of-use (TOU) tariffs combined with dynamic tariffs such as, but not limited to, critical peak pricing (CPP), 2) to create a new, RTP, revenue-grade meter that can communicate with the thermostat and with the outside world, and 3) to leverage the communication and energy scavenging technologies into a common platform that supports both the thermostat and the meter, thereby minimizing cost. The UCB team will build off research in five existing projects that have elements of the solutions. The five projects are: – – – – – 7/16/2015 Pico Radio TinyOS Sensors Smart Dust Energy Scavenging 9 Back to the rest of the world Advanced AMR is MUCH more than just automating meters. AMR requires a systems approach. The weak link is almost always the communication link, NOT the meter. Different communication technologies were designed to support different business needs. 7/16/2015 10 What are the business needs? What is being collected? Daily kWh Interval or TOU Demand What are collection requirements? All customer classes C+I only Residential, small business only When is the data required? All data by 8am day after, some portion in real time, etc. How diverse is territory? High Density - Urban Low Density – Rural, Mountain Varied 7/16/2015 11 Network Choice Considerations When Choosing the “right” network consider: Technology stability Network availability Security Scalability Bandwidth requirements Coverage Cost of ownership 7/16/2015 12 AMR Network Technology Choices Telephone Narrowband PLC Public Wireless (Paging, CDPD, GPRS) Private network wireless (licensed and non-licensed) Satellite Broadband Over Powerlines (BPL) 7/16/2015 13 AMI Landscape HIGHEST TWO-WAY FIXED RF MESH: Cellnet-UtiliNet Rex, StatSignal, SilverSpring Tantalus, ETG RF: AMDS, Comverge, Metrum, Amron PLC: TWACS, Hunt TS2, Cannon ONE-WAY FIXED Cellnet Hunt TS1 Hexagram, Itron DRIVE BY Cellnet Interleave, Itron (Hunt T300),Badger, Neptune, Sensus, Ramar LOWEST WALK BY CUSTOMER SERVICE 7/16/2015 OPERATIONS COMMERCE VERTICAL/HORIZONTAL 14 The Complete Utility Solution RF 1.5 way Server Industrial • Paging • GSM/GPRS • CDMA/1xRTT • UtiliNet • TCP/IP • POTS Residential&Commercial MESH, Two-way, Transmit Only, Drive-by Public Backhaul Two-way Paging Digital Cellular UtiliNet,Internet, PSTN Mesh Network Server Narrowband Server Meter and Data Management Platform IP Meter Server Utility Apps. HH, MV90, ForeRunner, CommSTAR Drive-by Hardware RF Endpoints BPL Server PLC Server Residential&Commercial Distribution Line Carrier 7/16/2015 AMI Data Center 16 Telephone Systems Industrial Accounts AMR Host System Local Network Telephone Wide Area Network Shared Line Inbound Telephone Industrial Meters Residential Commercial Accounts Dial-up Lines PSTN Residential Inbound Residential Inbound Water Gas Residential Inbound Electric Commercial Meters 7/16/2015 17 Telephone Systems Strengths Capable of supporting large scale AMR projects (urban, suburban, residential) Can be used in a surgical manner to address geographically dispersed commercial / industrial meters (deregulation) Capable of supporting the extended features and alarms for complex C&I metering applications (multi-measurement) Capable of supporting power quality applications for electric C&I applications Support via dial-up or inbound telephone communications (dedicated line or shared access) Issues Can be expensive to obtain line, if not a shared line Limited real time access on shared line No land line to some homes due to location or cell phone popularity Maintenance issues of phone line 7/16/2015 18 Radio Van Mobile Read Local Network AMR Host System Industrial Accounts RF RF RF Residential Inbound Residential Inbound Water Gas Residential Inbound Electric Meters Commercial Accounts 7/16/2015 Meters Some systems migrate to fixed Some systems collect Demand, TOU 19 Fixed Network Systems Will support large scale metering Capable of detailed data for billing options (Interval Data, Demand, TOU) Capable of supporting extended functionality (on request reads, off-cycle reads, virtual disconnect, etc.) Support provided for electric, gas, and water applications Advanced applications may be available at network base (outage, restoration, etc.) 7/16/2015 20 Private Radio Systems AMR Host System Wide Area Network RF RF Pole top devices Meter RF RF Controller Repeater Traditional Star Network 7/16/2015 21 Private Radio Systems Features Collectors/concentrators mounted on power poles communicate with meter devices. Unlicensed spread spectrum or licensed narrowband technology used for collector to meter communications. No peer to peer communications – strict hierarchical network Requires engineered communications network. Uses various WAN technologies to bring data back from pole. Repeaters used to extend coverage and fill in-network voids. Issues Radio coverage determined by RF technology & power Significant efforts & tools required for RF propagation siting Not as well suited to small scale, dispersed deployment Large scale deployment requires significant capital $ Examples Cellnet, Itron, Hexagram, AMDS 7/16/2015 22 Mesh Network Systems Meter Controller Node Routing Nodes 7/16/2015 23 Mesh Network Systems Features Each node acts as a repeater which increases network reliability. Self configuring - Each node creates a routing table of the other nodes that are best situated to pass a message. Node tables are updated dynamically to allow for new nodes or to delete removed or inoperable nodes. Systems become self-aware of changes in network. Self healing - Reduces single line of sight problems inherent in node concentrator types of RF systems. Communication equipment is installed within the meter, reducing communication architecture, siting, design and complexity. Most use unlicensed RF for communications between meters. Uses public network WAN from collector nodes. Issues Economics are best for denser areas. Requires backhauls from the concentrator nodes. Higher number of hops, the less reliable the system becomes- each hop adds latency. Examples Tantalus, Elster EnergyAxis, UtiliNet, StatSignal 7/16/2015 24 Mesh Networks Not the Same Distributed intelligence vs. dumb endpoint True mesh vs. multiple hops vs. preassigned routing Hopping based on RF Link or Geographic intelligence Properietary vs Public (802.15.4) 7/16/2015 25 Mesh - Architecture 7/16/2015 26 Hybrid Mesh Networks 7/16/2015 27 RF power is not the only performance criteria RF Pattern 012802D 012802F 012802G 012802H 012802I 012802J 012802K 012802L 012802M 012802N 90 120 96 60 94 92 90 30 150 88 86 84 82 82 180 0 84 86 88 90 330 210 92 94 96 240 300 98 96 94 92 90 88 86 84 82 84 86 88 90 92 94 96 98 270 ABB BAMM 7/16/2015 012502B 012502C 012502D 012502E 012502F 012502G 012502H 012502I 012802A 012802B 90 120 60 30 150 180 0 330 210 240 300 270 Front 28 Other Factors to consider in RF Receiver Sensitivity Noise floor (Unlicensed) Adjacent channel availability (Narrowband) Frequency (low frequency tends to propogate further) Data Rate 7/16/2015 29 Power Line Communications Utility AMR Host System DCS Distribution Network Communication Link Substation Equipment 7/16/2015 (Phone, MAS, Satellite, Fiber, etc.) 30 Power Line Communications Strengths Utility Owned network Long Range AMR Reading – in excess of 100 miles for some technologies Coverage not affected by geographic terrain Several technologies available (narrow band, 60Hz waveform) Defined communication infrastructure requirements Can start with a single substation and expand Can Support Load Management devices Issue Serving water and gas from PLC system Managing switching and modifications in power system Area and Spot Electrical Network systems must be analyzed Limits on available bandwidth results in limits on meters that can be controlled on each substation Examples TWACS by DCSI, Hunt T1 & T2, Canon Technologies 7/16/2015 31 Public Radio Networks Provides Individual Addressability & 2-Way Communications Generally Good For High-end customer applications & surgical deployments Geographic Coverage Issues (Deployment by Local Provider / Rural) Data management/delivery Issues Examples, Comverge, Metrum, Amron, SmartSynch Public Radio Network Utility AMR Host System Control Center 7/16/2015 32 Broadband Systems Broadband over Powerline (BPL) Provides internet connectivity via electric distribution system Significant interest by US government and electric utilities – mostly in areas of country with least ISP options (DSL, Cable) Several alternative technologies being examined frequencies: 2Mhz – 100Mhz speed: 100 Mbps or more on power lines Cannot justify on utility benefits alone Rural and URD issues Access BPL Basic Components –Injectors - internet access points, – required due to signal attenuation and distortion on powerline, BPL Injector - at service transformer, provides connection to customer 7/16/2015 Last segment from distribution transformer to customer home could be PLC or WIFI. BPL Repeater –Repeaters –Extractor Medium Voltage Power Lines Fiber / T1 Internet BPL Extractor Distribution Transformer Low Voltage Subscriber’s In-House BPL Modem + PC 33 Broadband Systems HFC (Hybrid Fiber Coax) Provides High Speed / Bandwidth Communications Cable Companies Upgrading from 1 to 2-Way Systems Many public utilities installing fiber systems for cable, internet, phone Requires Cable Access / Gateway at Meter Point even if customer not a subscriber to cable services AMR is in addition to other services (can’t justify on AMR alone) Utility Secondary Head-Ends AMR Host System HFC Primary Cable Head-End 7/16/2015 34 Internet Advantages Use Customer Internet Connection No Proprietary Infrastructure DSL, Cable, T1, BPL, GPRS, 1XRTT, 57.6 Kb connections to the Internet connections to the Internet No limit to number of IP connected devices Internet is here to stay $ Low Open Standard Fast Data Access Supports Many End Points Accessible Now, and in the Future What are the Obstacles? Making the Connection Customer’s Firewall Meter initiates connection to the outside DHCP IPv6 This is the equivalent of 4.3 × 10^20 addresses per inch² of the Earth's surface. Security Concerns Customer’s IT Staff 7/16/2015 35 Satellite Systems Low Earth Orbit (LEO) Good for Remote, Isolated High Value / Revenue Meters (Mines, Timber Mills, Pumping Stations, etc.) Complex Metering to Support High-End Applications Typically Interfaces Through KYZ Pulse (Limited functions) or Serial RS232 Utility AMR Host System Industrial / Commercial Meter(s) Attached to LEO Transceiver 7/16/2015 LEO Control Center 36 Mix’n Match Com Technologies Type Licensed Narrow Band (UHF VHF) Unlicensed 900 MHZ Unlicensed 2.4 GHZ Ultra Narrow Band Narrow Band BroadBand PL Public IP RF 7/16/2015 Mod/Protocol FHSS DSSS 7-FSK OOK FDMA IP HomePlug ANSI 709.2 CCSK 802.11 802.15.4 802.16 Power .25 mW .75 mW 100 mW 200 mW 500 mW 1 W (30dbm) Range Baud WAN 100ft .01 PSTN 300ft 15 TCP/IP 300ft 30 Frame ¼ mile 74 1 mile 510 5 mile 1600 20 mile 9600 100 mile 16.4K 19.2K 14 Mbps 150Mbps 37 Additional Considerations What is the technical support of the technology choice? Many current communication products have life of 3-5 years, while utility requirements are a 15+ year life. What does your business case REALLY require? 7/16/2015 38 Final Thoughts In evaluating the communication network technologies and offerings, keep in mind: What does the business case require? Metering Information Multi-commodity Connect/disconnect Demand response/Load control 7/16/2015 39 Contact Information Matt Monroe, P.E. ADI Program Manager Landis+Gyr Inc [email protected] 512-750-8933 7/16/2015 40