homehome Home chatchat Notifications


UK successfully transmits data via the national electricity grid, in a global premiere

Smart grids, smart cities.

Mihai Andrei
October 11, 2016 @ 4:26 pm

share Share

For the first time in history, information has been transmitted through a national electricity grid, opening massive opportunities for smart grids and smart cities.

Building smart cities is a key aspect of a sustainable future. For the first time in history, more people are living in urban than rural areas, and people living in cities generally consume much more resources and emit much more carbon dioxide than their rural counterparts (really big cities are actually more eco-friendly than smaller cities, but this is another discussion).

Basically, at the core of every smart city there is a smart grid. Smart grids include a variety of operational and energy measures designed to increase energy efficiency and reduce overall consumption and emissions.

The problem is that smart grids are hard to implement, for a number of reasons. For starters, designing anything that’s connected to millions of people is going to be difficult – especially when you’re working with something as crucial as electricity when failures are simply not an option. Furthermore, the infrastructure is old and vulnerable in many parts of the world and smart technologies are hard to incorporate. But British engineers may have found a way around that: by sending raw information through the grid itself.

The new data system, created using telecoms technology by Reactive Technologies, has been successfully tested already on the British grid. It sends messages to any appliances in any house connected through a smart plug, asking it to adjust its energy usage. In your home, it could ask your freezer to increase its temperature by a degree when there is high energy demand and then lower it back after the peak has passed. Also, it could instruct appliances to use renewable energy when readily available. The main idea is to make the consumption smarter and much more efficient, as opposed to generating more energy.

“The old mindset would be, we need to build more power stations,” Jens Madrian, at RT and former CFO at “big six” utility RWE npower told the Guardian “We disagree with that. There are other ways of managing electricity, one of which is carrying knowledge from the telecommunications and software engineering side into the energy sector.”

share Share

Climate Change Unleashed a Hidden Wave That Triggered a Planetary Tremor

The Earth was trembling every 90 seconds. Now, we know why.

Archaeologists May Have Found Odysseus’ Sanctuary on Ithaca

A new discovery ties myth to place, revealing centuries of cult worship and civic ritual.

The World’s Largest Sand Battery Just Went Online in Finland. It could change renewable energy

This sand battery system can store 1,000 megawatt-hours of heat for weeks at a time.

A Hidden Staircase in a French Church Just Led Archaeologists Into the Middle Ages

They pulled up a church floor and found a staircase that led to 1500 years of history.

The World’s Largest Camera Is About to Change Astronomy Forever

A new telescope camera promises a 10-year, 3.2-billion-pixel journey through the southern sky.

AI 'Reanimated' a Murder Victim Back to Life to Speak in Court (And Raises Ethical Quandaries)

AI avatars of dead people are teaching courses and testifying in court. Even with the best of intentions, the emerging practice of AI ‘reanimations’ is an ethical quagmire.

This Rare Viking Burial of a Woman and Her Dog Shows That Grief and Love Haven’t Changed in a Thousand Years

The power of loyalty, in this life and the next.

This EV Battery Charges in 18 Seconds and It’s Already Street Legal

RML’s VarEVolt battery is blazing a trail for ultra-fast EV charging and hypercar performance.

DARPA Just Beamed Power Over 5 Miles Using Lasers and Used It To Make Popcorn

A record-breaking laser beam could redefine how we send power to the world's hardest places.

Why Do Some Birds Sing More at Dawn? It's More About Social Behavior Than The Environment

Study suggests birdsong patterns are driven more by social needs than acoustics.