A smart grid is a transactive grid.
- Lynne Kiesling
Energy Equity And A Smart Market

Via Smart Grid News, a report on whether the future vision of electrical energy – the Smart Grid – introduce issues of Energy Equity unseen in today’s utility-based society.  We note this article as it – again – indicates the coming importance of imparting “ownership” of these heretofore hard to capture resources (i.e. water molecules and/or electrons) and creating some type of environment in which they can be valued & exchanged.  Smart markets anyone?

“…Tomorrow’s Smart Grid will have innovative features which are totally different from the centralized/federated infrastructure we know today. Instead of just connecting to the grid of a local energy provider, typically a utility company, homes and businesses will in some cases become distributed energy providers forming cooperative microgrids capable of producing and sharing power to each other or to other cooperative microgrids in a resilient adaptive fabric network.

As we look at this future view of electrical energy, it becomes apparent that the current view of equitable, readily available energy will be turned on its head. What was once a service-based environment will become an open marketplace that is commodity-based. How will energy traded by ordinary citizens or businesses drive fundamental changes of energy equity as we know it today? What was once a tightly controlled market of energy providers and consumers regulated by federal and local governments will become a vast marketplace of thousands or even millions of participants driven by market forces.

What are the potential equity considerations?

1)     What happens to the traditional role of government to regulate and provide a safety net to low income people and insure quality of service.

2)     How will we gain access to transmission and distribution?  Will we be able to purchase those services from competing providers, and how will those services be made equitably available to everyone including the poor?

3)     How will the average citizen gain fair and equitable trading rights as generators or consumers of energy? Will electrical energy market traders be regulated against fraud and market manipulation?

4)     Who will be responsible for taking on the social responsibilities of equitable price and supply?

The equity considerations of the Smart Grid are exciting, yet scary in their potential to impact the electrical energy supply of the average person.  Previous attempts in energy deregulation and marketization in various states across the United States, coupled with the Enron debacle in 2001, created huge spikes in energy cost and shortages in supply which impacted millions of people.

As we design and build the Smart Grid we should take the opportunity to make energy a true national treasure and a shared resource available to all by introducing equity factors in its design.



This entry was posted on Thursday, March 4th, 2010 at 11:05 am and is filed under Uncategorized.  You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.  You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site. 

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.


About This Blog And Its Authors
Grid Unlocked is powered by two eco-preneurs who analyze and reference articles, reports, and interviews that can help unlock the nascent, complex and expanding linkages between smart meters, smart grids, and above all: smart markets.

Based on decades of experience and interest in conservation, Monty Simus believes that a truly “smart” grid must be a “transactive” grid, unshackled from its current status as a so-called “natural monopoly.”

In short, an unlocked grid must adopt and harness the power of markets to incentivize individual users, linked to each other on a large scale, who change consumptive behavior in creative ways that drive efficiency and bring equity to use of the planet's finite and increasingly scarce resources.