Customer Energy Management Systems Essential for Smart Grid Implementation: White Paper

Aug. 10, 2011
The Energy Information Standards Alliance (EIS Alliance) has released a new white paper that explains Customer Energy Management Systems (CEMS) and why they will be at the heart of the technology systems that manage home and building energy consumption and interactions with the smart grid.

The Energy Information Standards Alliance (EIS Alliance) has released a new white paper that explains Customer Energy Management Systems (CEMS) and why they will be at the heart of the technology systems that manage home and building energy consumption and interactions with the smart grid. The white paper can be downloaded at http://www.eisalliance.org/.

CEMS serve as the central hub to manage energy use, optimized for residential, commercial, and industrial customers. There are a number of global companies that manufacture advanced CEMS technology and tens-of-thousands of such systems already deployed. The EIS Alliance is working to establish energy information specifications and standards that will support and enable the CEMS architecture in smart grid applications. Domains such as electric vehicle charging systems, HVAC systems, generators, storage systems, alternate energy generation, water heaters, and lighting are all on the Alliance roadmap to support seamless interoperability with the smart grid.

“Interoperability and security are watchwords in smart grid and energy control systems, and CEMS can leverage secure wireless IT networks,” said Dorothy Stanley, head of standards strategy for Aruba Networks. “For cost reasons and for interoperability, Wi-Fi is a leading choice because it provides tremendous flexibility with respect to CEMS deployment options, and allows integrators to leverage thousands of certified interoperable products in support of a broad range of energy control applications.”

Some of the features of future CEMS products will be the ability to receive energy information, such as real-time pricing from local utility providers, and deciding how to effectively manage heating and cooling. The EIS Alliance white paper on CEMS provides an excellent reference to show how this architecture will support commercial, industrial, and residential markets to achieve optimal energy efficiency.

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