By Felicity Barringer
Friday, January 11, 2008
SAN FRANCISCO: The conceit in the 1960s show "The Outer Limits" was
that outside forces had taken control of your television set.
Next year in California, state regulators are likely to have the
emergency power to control individual thermostats, sending temperatures
up or down through a radio-controlled device that will be required in
new or substantially modified houses and buildings to manage
electricity shortages.
The proposed rules are contained in a document circulated by the
California Energy Commission, which for more than three decades has set
state energy efficiency standards for home appliances, like water
heaters, air conditioners and refrigerators.
The changes would allow utilities to adjust customers' preset
temperatures when the price of electricity is soaring. Customers could
override the utilities' suggested temperatures. But in emergencies, the
utilities could override customers' wishes.
Final approval is expected next month.
"You realize there are times - very rarely, once every few years - when
you would be subject to a rotating outage and everything would crash
including your computer and traffic lights, and you don't want to do
that," said Arthur Rosenfeld, a member of the energy commission.
Reducing individual customers' electrical use - if necessary,
involuntarily - could avoid that, Rosenfeld said. "If you can control
rotating outages by letting everyone in the state share the pain," he
said, "there's a lot less pain to go around."
While the proposals have received little attention in California, the
Internet and talk radio are abuzz with indignation at the idea.
The radio-controlled thermostat is not a new technology, though it is
constantly being tweaked; the latest iterations were on display this
week at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. Pacific Gas and
Electric, the major utility in Northern California, already has a pilot
program in Stockton that allows customers to choose to have their
air-conditioning systems attached to a radio-controlled device to
reduce use during periods when electricity rates are at their peak. But
the idea that a government would mandate use of these devices and
reserve the power to override a building owner's wishes galls some
people.
"This is an outrage," one Californian said in an e-mail message to
Rosenfeld. "We need to build new facilities to handle the growth in
this state, not become Big Brother to the citizens of California."
The broader stir on the Internet began when Joseph Somsel, a San
Jose-based contributor to the publication American Thinker, wrote an
article a week ago on the programmable communicating thermostat, or
PCT. Somsel went after the proposal with arguments that were by turns
populist ("Come the next heat wave, the elites might be comfortably
lolling in La Jolla's ocean breezes" while "the Central Valley's poor
peons are baking in Bakersfield"), free-market ("PCTs will obscure the
price signals to power plant developers") and civil libertarian ("the
new PCT requirement certainly seems to violate the 'a man's home is his
castle' common-law dictum"). Word of the California proposal hit the
outrage button in corners of the Internet, was written about in The
North County Times in Southern California, and got a derisive mention
on Wednesday on Rush Limbaugh's radio program. The fact that similar
radio-controlled technologies have been used on a voluntary basis in
irrigation systems on farm fields and golf courses and in limited
programs for buildings on Long Island is seldom mentioned in Internet
postings that make liberal use of references to George Orwell's
dystopian novel "1984" and Big Brother, the omnipresent voice of
Orwell's police state. Ralph Cavanagh, an energy expert with the
Natural Resources Defense Council, said in an interview that at a time
of peak electricity use, "most people given a choice of 2 degrees of
temperature setback and 14th-century living would happily embrace this
capacity." Somsel, in an interview on Thursday, said he had done
further research and was concerned that the radio signal - or the
Internet instructions that would be sent, in an emergency, from
utilities' central control stations to the broadcasters sending the FM
signal - could be hacked into. That is not possible, said Nicole Tam, a
spokeswoman for PG&E who works with the pilot program in Stockton.
Radio pages "are encrypted and encoded," Tam said.
Original
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California wants to control home thermostats
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