In recent weeks the DOE and utilities around the country have been inking contracts that will at long last unleash federal stimulus funds for scores of Smart Grid projects. Is the momentum finally shifting? Click inside for a quick update on Smart Grid Investment Grant recipients.">
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Smart Grid Stimulus Update: The Journey Has Begun, But There’s a Long Road Ahead
By SGN Staff
Apr 27, 2010 - 12:49:24 PM

By Liz Enbysk

SGN Managing Editor

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Are we almost there? How much longer? Why is it taking so long?

 

Like a kid in the backseat of a car on a family vacation, waiting for the Smart Grid to gain traction with the promise of billions in federal stimulus money has been a long, slow journey.

 

So are we almost there yet?

 

It was February 2009 when President Obama signed the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) in an attempt to kick start a wallowing economy, put people back to work and, among other things, push a clean energy agenda that included modernization of the electric grid and development of renewable energy sources.

 

On March 4, 2010 – more than a year later – Glendale Water & Power became the first city in the nation to sign a contract for a Smart Grid Investment Grant (SGIG). The California municipal utility will use the $20 million to support its $51 million AMI-Smart Grid initiative.

 

Some $3.4 billion in SGIGs were announced back in October, but tax issues and other hurdles delayed getting contracts signed and money out the door. To its credit, besides the SGIGs and $620 million in regional demonstration and energy storage projects the Smart Grid industry has been focused on, the DOE has been working on stimulus-funded weatherization and energy efficiency programs in all 50 states and territories, job training programs, stimulus-backed loan programs in conjunction with other federal agencies, plus spin-off efforts such as ARPA-E, the recently created agency within DOE that is funding high risk, high-payoff transformational technologies.

 

However, since Glendale W&P’s announcement last month, we’ve seen a steady stream of “contract signing” announcements as utilities work with the Department of Energy on the labyrinth of detail that makes up a federal contract:

 

·         March 12: NV Energy became the first investor-owned utility to ink a DOE contract for $138 million to help launch its $301 million Advanced Service Delivery project to build out a Smart Grid infrastructure.

·         March 23: CenterPoint Energy – one of six utilities to received the maximum SGIG award of $200 million – announced it had signed an agreement with DOE. CenterPoint’s Houston Electric will use $150 million toward accelerating smart meter rollouts and the other $50 million to start building a self-healing intelligent grid.

·         March 30: Midwest ISO announces it is the first regional transmission organization to execute an agreement with DOE and will use its $17.3 million grant toward installation of more than 150 high-tech monitoring devices that will monitor the state of the electrical grid 30 times each second.

·         March 31: Reliant Energy finalizes its stimulus grant agreement with DOE for $20 million to expand its rollout of smart energy solutions in Texas. Idaho Power announces it has finalized a contract with DOE for $47 million in stimulus funding for its Smart Grid initiatives.

·         April 6: Black Hills Corp. inked its agreement for $20.7 million in stimulus money for Smart Grid projects in Colorado, Wyoming and South Dakota.

·         April 7: Pepco Holdings signed contracts for three ARRA grants totaling $168.1 million to advance Smart Grid projects in Maryland, the District of Columbia and New Jersey.

·         April 12: Peco Energy, an Exelon subsidiary, finalized its $200 million SGIG which will be used for its Smart Future Greater Philadelphia initiatives, including smart meter deployment and demonstration projects with two sub-recipients.

·         April 20: American Transmission Co. announces it has entered into two agreements with the DOE; part of the $12.7 million will be used to equip ATC substations with PMUs and the remainder will go to extend its fiber optic cable network.

·         April 20: Naperville, Illinois signed an agreement with DOE to receive $11 million for a Smart Grid project that will include deployment of 57,000 smart meters.

·         April 21: Baltimore Gas & Electric – another of the big stimulus winners – finalized its agreement with DOE for $200 million to support the utility’s comprehensive Smart Grid

initiative.

 

And so it goes. We’re by no means there yet … but at least the pedal is to the metal.

 

You might also be interested in …

Beyond Metering: 10 Pretty Darn Interesting Stimulus-Funded Smart Grid Projects 

Smart Grid Grants: Not Currently Taxable, But There’s a Hitch

Will We Get Our Money’s Worth? $3.4 Billion in Smart Grid Stimulus Grants Go to 100 Projects

Smart Grid Investment Grants by State

Smart Grid Investment Grants by Category

Smart Grid Stimulus news and commentary

 

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