UK customers get access to Google's PowerMeter

Google's PowerMeter service made its U.K. debut on Wednesday, allowing British Gas customers to monitor their electricity usage from afar online. AlertMe has linked its system with Google's PowerMeter, which can generate graphs of electricity usage that can be viewed anywhere using a mobile phone or computer. British Gas has partnered with AlertMe, a company based in Cambridge, England, that sells hardware and a service that sends electricity consumption data over the Internet. Many utilities are working on smart-meter technology to help consumers become more aware of their electricity usage and take steps to reduce it.

Google, which announced its PowerMeter service in February, estimates that consumers can cut their energy consumption by up to 15 percent if they have more information on their consumption patterns. The U.K. government is striving to have smart meters in every home by 2020, and the U.S. plans to install up to 40 million smart meters as part of a recent economic stimulus plan. Google's PowerMeter application can be placed on a person's iGoogle home page, a page people can customize with various Google gadgets. The meter reader takes second-by-second measurements, which are then transmitted wirelessly to AlertMe's "Nano Hub," which plugs into a router. To monitor electricity, AlertMe sells a device called a "meter reader." Since U.K. power meters can be read inductively, a homeowner just needs to clip the device onto the meter, said Pilgrim Beart, AlertMe's CEO. It avoids the difficulty of installing "smart meters," which are devices designed to replace old power meters for use in conjunction with remote monitoring systems. The information is then sent to AlertMe, which has its own Web-based front end where customers can log in and view their electricity data.

AlertMe also sells a "SmartPlug" that records the energy consumption for a specific device. Customers can also opt to view the information through Google's PowerMeter. Those cost £25 (US$41) each. AlertMe's service can break it down by device. Under the current configuration, however, Google's PowerMeter will only display the total household energy consumption rather than break it down by appliance.

The data can be viewed in kilowatt hours by day, week, month or year or as the total cost of the electricity. Users can also opt for a slightly cheaper payment arrangement, with a one-year £99 subscription that includes the meter reader, transmitter and hub. AlertMe sells the hardware for £69 and charges £2.99 per month for the online service. The option to use Google PowerMeter is free. It is testing with British Gas a system that would allow homeowners to control their programmers - thermostats in the U.S. - online, Beart said.

AlertMe is already working on more advanced features that will give consumers more control over power bills. AlertMe's labs are also working on software that would be able to distinguish major appliances from one another, such as identifying the refrigerator versus the washing machine versus a kettle. That improvement means people wouldn't need the £25 SmartPlug. All of those appliances have distinct electricity patterns that can be identified using algorithms, Beart said. Overall, the data can then be used to figure out consumption patterns.

AlertMe is entirely consumer-focused and wants to make it easy to "engage people effectively and change their behavior," Beart said. The delivery of the information is important. Although AlertMe's Web front-end enables more detail for its system than Google's PowerMeter, Beart said the Google option gives people another way to look at the data. The company, first:utility, is providing free smart meters to some 30,000 U.K. customers. Separately on Tuesday, Google announced it had reached its first agreement with a U.K. utility to use its PowerMeter.

Starting next month, those customers will able to use Google's PowerMeter in conjunction with those meters. For its PowerMeter program, Google said it has secured agreements with two device companies and 10 utilities in five countries, wrote Ka-Ping Yee, a software engineer, and Jens Redmer, of Google's business development, on a company blog.

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