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Market Research Report
U.S. Smart Grid: Market Layers/Technologies/Players, 18 Demonstration Projects and Future Outlook
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U.S. Smart Grid: Market Layers/Technologies/Players, 18 Demonstration Projects and Future Outlook published by Fuji-Keizai U.S.A., Inc. in October, 2009. This report consists of 124 PAGES and the price starts from US $ 2800.
Abstract
The U.S. electric power grid is a heavily regulated and largely utility-owned
infrastructure carrying electricity from power plants to homes and businesses.
Within this infrastructure are layers of equipment for managing the
transmission and distribution (T&D) networks and different local networks for
delivering remote measurement and control communications.
The development of a next-generation electric power grid enhanced with
intelligent communications and IT systems is one of the major energy
technology challenges for the United States for the coming decade.
The smart grid represents a significant move away from the historical,
utility-owned electricity distribution infrastructure to an internet-like
networked infrastructure that directly connects utilities (supply) with
customers (demand).
Smart Grid uses an amalgam of advanced components, technologies and
applications to integrate renewable power sources enable energy efficiency in
home electricity use and electrify transportation.
This vastly complex machine not only introduces additional layers of advanced
technology but with it, many new stakeholders from adjacent markets - IT
companies, wireless network providers, advanced battery makers, automakers,
makers of home automation products and services and smart home appliances.
This report walks readers through the forest of smart grid definitions,
technologies, applications, standards, emerging scenarios and deployments
underway - and explains the big problems yet to be solved in the areas of
interoperability standards (where there is progress) and renewable integration
and energy storage, where more R&D and financial incentives are needed to make
the smart grid a “greener grid,” too.
The report highlights the strategies and activities of the many players
involved in the emerging smart grid industry in the United States, including
activities of the utilities, technology providers, state regulators and
Department of Energy (DOE).
The report includes capsule profiles of more than 70 companies that are
jockeying for market-leading positions or attempting to grow businesses that
serve the smart grid infrastructure and services markets.
It also gives details on 18 smart grid advanced demonstrations projects aimed
at testing the concepts of virtual power plants and microgrids and the
integration of different distributed energy resources and storage technologies.
The report presents these latest trends and the prospects of the emerging
smart grid in eight sections:
- 1. Smart Grid Structure
- 2. U.S. Government Planning & Funding
- 3. Demonstration Projects, Technologies & Operations
- 4. Standards: Now & Future
- 5. Market Trends: 2009-2015
- 6. High-Growth Areas in the Near Future: Activity & Strategy
- 7. States Supporting the High-Growth Areas
- 8. Other Market Participants: Activities and Strategies
Table of Contents
Executive Summary
1. Smart Grid Structure
- 1.1 Total Picture
- Figure 1-1: Conventional Power Grid: One-Way Transmission on Networks
Owned by Utilities
- Figure 1-2: Smart Grid: Bidirectional (2-Way) Integrated Communication,
Automation and Energy Application Infrastructure with Multiple Stakeholders
- 1.2 Total Market Picture
- 1.2.1 Market Layers
- 1.2.2 Market Players, by Segment
- Table 1-1: End-to-End Market Players and Their Products, Technologies
and Services (Market Segment, Application, Companies, Products or
Technology or Service)
- Table 1-2: Definitions of Smart Grid Market Segments/Technologies
2. U.S. Government Planning & Funding
- 2.1 U.S. Government Planning (Big Picture)
- Table 2-1: Recovery Act (ARRA) Funding Framework for Electric Power
Grid (Energy Segment, Amount($), Comment)
- Table 2-2: U.S. Legislation (Energy Bills) Impacting Smart Grid
Industry (Legislation, Significance/Provisions)
- 2.1.1 Public Infrastructure
- Table 2-3. U.S. Smart Grid Regulatory Structure
- 2.1.2 Targeted Development Technologies
- 2.2 Funding Status and Applications
- 2.2.1 Recovery Act Awards for Smart Grid Demonstration Projects
(Segment, Awarded Company, Amount ($), Developed Technology)
- 2.2.2 Funds Applied For
3. Demonstration Projects, Technologies & Operations
- 3.1 Projects Completed or Advancing to Next Stage of Deployment
- 3.1.1 GridWise Demonstration Project (also known as Washington State
Project)
- 3.1.2 Arizona Salt River Project (SRP)
- 3.1.3 Austin (TX) Energy: “Pecan Street” Project
- 3.1.4 Boulder, Colorado: Xcel Energy SmartGridCity
- 3.1.5 District of Columbia: “PowerCentsDC” Project
- 3.1.6 Energy Smart Miami
- 3.1.7 New York Con Edison DER Integration Project with Smart Solar Pilot
- 3.1.8 New Mexico “Green Grid” Project
- 3.1.9 Maui Smart Grid Integration Project
- 3.1.10 Southern California Edison (SCE) SmartConnect
- 3.1.11 Outside of U.S.: Amsterdam Project
- 3.2 Other Advanced SG Demonstration Projects - Snapshots
- 3.2.1 San Diego Gas & Electric Beach Cities Microgrid Project
- 3.2.2 AEP (TX) gridSMART
- 3.2.3 CenterPoint Energy Houston
- 3.2.4 City of Fort Collins (CO): Fort ZED (Zero Energy District)
- 3.2.5 Illinois Institute of Technology Smart Microgrid Prototype
- 3.2.6 Chevron Energy Solutions/CERTS Solar, Fuel Cell and Storage
Microgrid
- 3.2.7 Pacific Gas & Electric (PG&E)
4. Standards: Now & Future
- 4.1 NIST: Big Picture & Scenario
- Table 4-1: Four FERC-Identified Smart Grid Application Priorities and
Scenarios
- 4.2 NIST Activity
- Table 4-2: NIST Standards-Setting Working Groups and Roles
- 4.3 Smart Meter Standard
- 4.4 Current Standard and Future Directions
- Table 4-2: Priorities for Standards-Setting Action in 2010
- Table 4-3: Current List of 31 “High Relevance” Smart Grid
Standards Identified by NIST
5. Market Trends: 2009-2015
- 5.1 Total Market Forecast: Big Picture
- 5.2 Market Forecast by Segments: High-Growth Segments (AMI, Power
Automation)
- 5.2.1 AMI Smart Meters
- 5.2.2 AMI-enabled Demand Response and Distribution Automation
- 5.2.3 Grid-Connected DG and Distributed Energy Storage (Emerging)
- Table 5-1: Energy Storage System (ESS) Technologies and Candidate
Applications
- Table 5-2: Energy Storage Systems Market Forecast
- 5.3. Smart Grid Timeline (Directions)
6. High-Growth Areas in the Near Future: Activity & Strategy
- Common Research Item:
- Contact: Location, Tel#, URL
- Technology Development
- Deployment (Products, Services)
- Strategic Alliance(s)
- Market Perception or Researcher Analysis
- 6.1 AMI: Advanced Metering & Networking/Communication Products (14
companies)
- 6.1.1 Comverge, Inc.
- 6.1.2 Echelon Corporation
- 6.1.3 Elster Integrated Solutions LLC
- 6.1.4 General Electric (GE)
- 6.1.5 Itron North America
- 6.1.6 Landis+Gyr North America
- 6.1.7 Sensus Metering Systems
- 6.1.8 Ambient Corporation
- 6.1.9 Arcadian Networks
- 6.1.10 Current Group, LLC
- 6.1.11 Eka Systems, Inc.
- 6.1.12 Silver Spring Networks
- 6.1.13 SmartSynch, Inc.
- 6.1.14 Trilliant Inc.
- 6.2 T&D Automation / Grid Optimization (5 Companies)
- 6.2.1 ABB Group, North America
- 6.2.2 Cooper Power Systems
- 6.2.3 GE T&D
- 6.2.4 MicroPlanet Technology Corp.
- 6.2.5 SEL (Schweitzer Engineering Laboratories)
- 6.3 Grid-Connected Distributed Generation (Renewable or Nonrenewable) &
Distributed Energy Storage (11 companies)
- 6.3.1 A123Systems
- 6.3.2 Altair Nanotechnologies, Inc.
- 6.3.3 Beacon Power Corp.
- 6.3.4 BPL Global, Ltd.
- 6.3.5 GreenSmith Energy Management Systems LLC
- 6.3.6 GridPoint, Inc.
- 6.3.7 Ice Energy, Inc.
- 6.3.8 Infotility, Inc.
- 6.3.9 S&C Electric Company
- 6.3.10 Viridity Energy
- 6.3.11 Ventyx
7. States Supporting the High-Growth Areas
- 7.1 Top-Five States Supporting Smart Grid Activities
- 7.2 Scheduled Smart Meters Deployments, by State, by 2015 (in descending
order)
- 7-3. State-by-State Policies Affecting Smart Grid Initiatives
8. Other Market Participants: Activities and Strategies
- Common Research Item:
- Contact: Location, Tel#, URL
- Technology Development
- Deployment (Products, Services)
- Strategic Alliance(s)
- Market Perception or Researcher Analysis
- 8.1 Demand Response Products & Services (5 companies)
- 8.1.1 Comverge
- 8.1.2 CPower
- 8.1.3 EnerNOC
- 8.1.4 Ziphany LLC
- 8.1.5 Sequentric Energy Systems LLC
- 8.2 Other Software, Solutions & Applications (5 companies)
- 8.2.1 Aclara Software
- 8.2.2. Ecologic Analytics, LLC
- 8.2.3 Grid Net, Inc.
- 8.2.4 eMeter Corp.
- 8.2.5 OSIsoft, Inc.
- 8.3 Home Area Networks (HAN), Building Networking & Energy Control
Management Systems (14 companies)
- 8.3.1 Agilewaves, Inc.
- 8.3.2 Control4
- 8.3.3 Ember Corporation
- 8.3.4 Energate, Inc.
- 8.3.5 EnergyHub
- 8.3.6 GainSpan Corporation
- 8.3.7 Google/Power Meter
- 8.3.8 Greenbox Technology, Inc.
- 8.3.9 Intel Corp.
- 8.3.10 Johnson Controls, Inc.
- 8.3.11 Onzo, Ltd.
- 8.3.12 OPOWER (formerly Positive Energy)
- 8.3.13 Outsmart Power Systems LLC
- 8.3.14 Tendril Networks, Inc.
- 8.4 Communication Companies (3 companies)
- 8.4.1 AT&T
- 8.4.2 Sprint Nextel
- 8.4.3 Verizon Communications
- 8.5 Energy Utility Companies (13 companies)
- 8.5.1 American Electric Power (AEP)
- 8.5.2 BC Hydro
- 8.5.3 CenterPoint Energy (CPE)
- 8.5.4 Consolidated Edison of New York (ConEd)
- 8.5.5 Consumers Energy
- 8.5.6 Duke Energy
- 8.5.7 Midwest ISO
- 8.5.8 New York ISO
- 8.5.9 National Grid U.S.
- 8.5.10 Progress Energy, Inc.
- 8.5.11 Sempra Energy / San Diego Gas & Electric
- 8.5.12 Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA)
- 8.5.13 Vermont Electric Power Co.
- 8.6 Other Major Players (8 non-incumbents)
- 8.6.1 Cisco Systems
- 8.6.2 Hewlett-Packard
- 8.6.3 Honeywell
- 8.6.4 IBM
- 8.6.5 Microsoft Corp.
- 8.6.6 Oracle
- 8.6.7 SAP
- 8.6.8 Texas Instruments
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