The smart meters will find place in every British household by the year 2020, but the cost incurred in acquiring them is still not clear
In a bid to ascertain the cost of the exact energy consumed by the energy users, the British Government has announced to heave out smart meters for gas and electricity in every household in UK by the year 2020.
The new and advanced smart meters ensure providing real-time energy usage figures to both energy companies and the consumers. This would curb the estimated bills and guarantee fair billing of the energy.
Energy minister of state for the Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC), Lord Hunt said that it would be the responsibility of the energy suppliers to buy the smart meters and install them in UK homes so as to streamline the process for the energy consumers.
However, he added: “It would not be unexpected if [the costs] fed through to energy prices”. This seems to suggest that customers should expect higher bills to pay for the technology.
Along with the smart meters, the energy suppliers are also told by the Government to install standalone visual display units in every British Home. The unit will aid the consumers in keeping a check on their energy consumption and plummet the usage in case the bill is going far out.
To ensure communication between the energy suppliers and smart meters, the government is also musing to develop a national communications system that would ensure coordination between the two.
Lord Hunt, while speaking at the General Electric headquarters agreed that trotting out smart meters across UK will be a massive project with more or less intensity as the UK’s conversion to natural gas in the 1960s.
Commercial manager at Energychoices.co.uk, Chris Eagle, said: “There are still plenty of decisions to be made concerning the roll-out and it is not yet clear who will really end up footing the bill.
“The roll-out will cost billions of pounds and while consumers should see benefits, the overall savings will depend on how much of the cost of smart meters energy suppliers pass on through increased energy prices.”
The Department of Energy and Climate Change in collaboration with Ofgem is mulling over to come out with the framework for the smart meter roll-out in UK and is scheming to publish details of it in summer 2010.