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Several systems designed
to piggyback high-speed data transmissions over power lines
are in field trials around the country and, paradoxically,
if they are successful they could breathe new life into the
fiber-optic cable market.
Electric utility companies in Alabama,
Georgia, Virginia, Pennsylvania, Ohio, New York and elsewhere
have trial installations with clusters of Internet users receiving
their e-mail and surfing the Web over power lines coming into
their homes and offices. Their modems don't plug into cable
devices, telephone jacks or satellite dishes; they plug into
any wall outlet at hand.
Power line modems for consumers,
designed to turn household circuits into local area networks
within dwellings or offices, are already on retail shelves.
The devices distribute Internet service that has been delivered
by cable modem or other high-speed connections to the customers.
The new hardware and software that
electric utilities are testing works with similar modems inside
buildings, but cuts local telephone and cable companies out
of the business of moving the data. Instead, the Internet
is tapped at a fiber-optic node somewhere within a mile or
two of the end users. Data is converted through a processor
and routed over medium- and low-voltage electric distribution
circuits for "last mile" delivery to consumers. The systems
hinge on further penetration of fiber-optic line directly
into neighborhoods around the country.
"The actual technology itself,
I am not concerned with. I'm pretty sure its going to work.
But we still have to understand the business and cost model,"
says Lief Ericson, business development manager for Southern
Telecom, Atlanta.
"The opportunity could be significant
if the vendors really pull the technology to a stage where
the utilities feel comfortable deploying it. There are very
few competitors in the last mile arena, just regional Bells
and cable companies. This is a third wire into the house,"
says Ericson, whose company is a subsidiary of energy giant
Southern Co., Atlanta. The Telecom unit markets long-haul
and dark fiber in metropolitan areas.
Power line communication, as the
technology is known, has been used by utilities for many decades
for high-voltage system control and information feedback over
the distribution grid. The new wrinkle for PLC is that growing
consumer and business demand for high bandwidth communication
is creating a distribution opportunity over medium- and low-voltage
lines. Power companies are naturally positioned to meet the
demand. The power-line delivery system also has a substantial
inherent advantage over conventional alternatives: speed.
It is about 20 times faster than a standard telephone modem
connection in uploading and downloading transmissions.
Consolidated Edison Co. of New
York Inc., New York City, has a small test site in Westchester
County, north of New York City. The trial deployment ties
into the fiber-optic data stream at a local substation and
distributes data on a 4-kv circuit serving about 400 homes.
Only two homes, on different circuit branches, have been connected
so far. But part of the system's attraction is that all the
others could now easily be connected, since the Internet service
is already pulsing in the wire on the pole outside. Click
here to view chart
George Jee, ConEd director of resource
planning, says more users will be given the chance to come
on line as the trial scales up over the next few months. The
picture is similar at many other utilities around the country,
as a handful of vendors compete to supply the technology and
services, and utilities carefully test small deployments.
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| MULTI-USE
ConEd's Jee with Ambient pole-mounted PLC bypass processor.
It can also help monitor system. |
Ericson says utilities "are very,
very conservative," and have only begun "to come out of the
closet" with their interest in PLC over the last year. "The
standards are being established as we speak. It is a slow,
methodical process," he says. Southern is also moving its
testing from the lab to the field and is looking at devices
from six vendors, Ericson says. Last August, the firm announced
a comprehensive testing agreement of PLC technology with Main.net
Power Line Communications Ltd., Reston, Va.
ConEd has already put its money
on another vendor's technology, that of Ambient Corp., Brookline,
Mass. ConEd bought 50% of Ambient's outstanding stock for
$1.4 million in early October.
Ambient uses a proprietary induction
coupling, whose prototype design is being refined, to get
data on and off power lines without having to break and make
hard connections. The couplings are used to create loops to
bypass data around transformers, such as those between medium-voltage
transmission circuits and low-voltage service lines. The couplings
clamp onto the line and can be installed with a glove or hotstick
from a bucket, says Jee.
If the last mile problem is solved
by PLC, the fiber-optic build-out may resume to bring fiber
into more neighborhoods and to run cable to other logical
distribution points, such as electric substations.
"This is not a long-haul scenario.
It's a last-mile product," says Ericson. "It's not so much
a question of construction, [it's] more a matter of implementation,
maintenance and replacement of PLC equipment, plus the leveraging
of fiber-optic assets. The utmost distance you will get out
of PLC is about 2 miles."
Jee says the utilities are intrigued
because PLC would not only leverage lines already installed
but would open up new control and communication potential
for utility uses, such as remote meter reading and household
and commercial energy management. Backup batteries built into
the relay boxes and processors of the system will also provide
an independent test circuit to monitor equipment and check
distribution circuit integrity. System software running on
battery backup will clearly pinpoint line breakage on otherwise
dead circuits during outages and storm emergencies.
Ericson says there are many reasons
electric companies are interested. "One of the real value
propositions as we move forward is that outside of the fact
that the utilities have wires to every room in the house,
everything in the house that plugs into the wall, in theory,
can be in communication with every other device," notes Ericson.
Pennsylvania Power and Light Corp.,
Allentown, is anticipating leveraging about 700 miles of fiber-optic
cable it already has built to support utility and powerplant
operations. The fiber rings its service area, says company
spokesman George Lewis. In September, the company started
a PLC test with 25 residential customers near Allentown, but
it has eyes on a much bigger prize.
"We are intending to start out
small," says project manager Jon Loe. "Really, at this point
we're just assessing the feasibility of the technology, that
it's a good product, that it works, and, if we are going to
attach our company name and take it to the market, that it
is something our customers would want."
Main.net is providing hardware.
"They are giving us the equipment and PPL employees are doing
the installation," Loe says. "They're providing the boxes
and our people are putting them up."
"The potential is there," Loe adds.
"[We] know there are about 20,000 office and commercial buildings
within a half-mile of that fiber ring. That's pretty good
to start with," he says.
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