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Homes to get free energy monitors

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By Mark Kinver

Science and nature reporter, BBC News

 

 

Every household in the UK will be able to request a free device that

shows how much electricity is being used in the home at any one

particular moment.

 

Ministers are set to announce the plan in the forthcoming Energy

White Paper.

 

They hope " real-time monitors " will help cut greenhouse gas emissions

and the amount of energy wasted by appliances being left on standby.

 

The government recently committed itself to cut carbon dioxide

emissions by 60% from 1990 levels by 2050.

 

Households in the UK are responsible for about one third of the

nation's greenhouse gas emissions, and have been the focus of a

number of recent ministerial initiatives to reduce energy

consumption.

 

Seeing the savings

 

Luke Nicholson, creative director of More Associates, which

specialises in sustainable design, welcomed the scheme's expected

inclusion in the white paper.

 

Consumers tell us they are desperate to bring down bills so I hope

the industry is ready to meet consumer demand for these devices

 

Energywatch spokeswoman

 

He added that the devices were simple to install and were an

effective way to give people more information about their energy

consumption.

 

" You have a little sensor in your meter cupboard that measures how

much energy you are using, and you have a small display that you can

carry around the house. "

 

" When you turn things on and off you can see the difference in how

much energy you are using. "

 

A Labour Party spokesman said that the monitors were not the latest

generation of meters, known as " smart meters " .

 

Smart meters also give consumers real-time information of how much

electricity is being consumed, but have the ability to be read

remotely by energy suppliers.

 

They are more accurate than real-time monitors because they have to

be calibrated to a standard necessary to record information needed

for billing customers.

 

But Mr Nicholson said the real-time monitors would meet the needs of

most energy conscious consumers.

 

 

 

 

What are smart meters?

 

" In terms of energy reduction, there is very little more you can do

with smart meters that you cannot achieve with what is proposed

here, " he explained.

 

" People can see immediately what impact their behaviour has, not just

in terms of money but in terms of carbon as well. "

 

A spokeswoman for the electricity and gas consumer council, otherwise

known as Energywatch, said it supported any plan that would give

customers access to free monitors.

 

" While consumers wait the arrival of proper smart meters these

devices are a welcome interim measure that allow us all to manage our

consumption, reduce our bills and cut our carbon output, " she told

BBC News.

 

" Consumers tell us they are desperate to bring down bills so I hope

the industry is ready to meet consumer demand for these devices. "

 

Meaningful information

 

Although the people who request a monitor will receive it free of

charge, Mr Nicholson said consumers would ultimately foot the bill

because the cost of the scheme would either be recouped through taxes

or their energy bills.

 

" However, these things are not terribly expensive to make and even

with the devices that are available now, research shows that you can

save about 7% on your annual energy bill, " he added.

 

But he warned the devices would only be used by households if they

displayed meaningful information, such as cost of energy and carbon

emissions.

 

" The biggest risk is that after the government announces this, they

might specify this too weakly to make it useful.

 

" We might end up making 22m pieces of plastic that end up in people's

drawers because they aren't any good. "

 

Under EU legislation, member states have to take steps to provide

customers with real-time information about their energy consumption.

 

A Labour Party spokesman told BBC News that the scheme was likely to

be up and running in 2008.

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