Monday, 19 July 2010
Due to cover 28 million homes and small business properties by 2020 or sooner, this multi-billion pound initiative is designed to reduce energy costs and lower Great Britain's carbon dioxide emissions by 2.6 million tonnes per year when the rollout is complete. Long-range radio has already proved successful in North America and offers substantial benefits in Great Britain.
BT is backing long-range radio after spending 18 months analysing the various communications options available to meet the needs of the smart metering initiative. Unlike mobile, it can provide truly nationwide coverage and dependable reception indoors. The fact it operates on dedicated licensed spectrum is also important as it is ideal in ensuring the security of supply and protection of consumer data while meeting the needs of the Energy Industry.
The Government will soon publish a prospectus that will provide details about the project and the possible commercial opportunities. The partners will review this document and will then formally launch their proposal in September. Their aim will be to offer a universal, dedicated, secure and resilient nationwide communications network to underpin the Government's plans for smart meters and subsequent smart grid applications.
Olivia Garfield, BT Group Strategy Director, said: "Smart meters will use telecommunications to deliver important environmental benefits and so BT is determined to be at the heart of the project. It is vital that any solution is designed for ubiquitous coverage of homes and is thoroughly secure and resilient. We believe that long range radio is the only technology to offer nationwide coverage and we will release more detail in a series of events in September."
"A communications network designed to meet the unique needs of all of Britain's utilities - electricity, gas and water - must be able to deliver universal connectivity and long-term resilience. And the only way to achieve this is through a dedicated network based on long-range radio. The collaboration of three of Britain's leading communications and security organisations provides further weight to this argument and provides the most effective way of delivering the government's target of rolling out smart meters to all homes in the shortest time possible," added John Cronin, Managing Director for Arqiva Wireless Access.
"The smart meter initiative will represent a significant addition to our critical national infrastructure and, as such, security and privacy must be key considerations in its design. We are working with the group to develop safeguards to ensure protection of the data, processes, communications networks and operational sites from risk and to demonstrate how the new infrastructure can be secured effectively,"said Martin Sutherland, Managing Director, Detica.
This partnership between three of the UK's leading communications network and IT services providers brings together an leading combination of design and operational experience in the delivery of national, large-scale, communications and IT infrastructure projects to meet the smart meter challenge.
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Porter Novelli 31 St Petersburgh Place London W2 4LA
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