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Andy65<!-- END TEMPLATE: dbtech_usertag_mention --> I think NG can guess at what points supply and demand would be, however there is minimal data collected on exactly how much is used per area of the country, from counties down to towns and streets. As you can imagine this data would vary massively house to house and county to county. The information collected by smart meters will give us a seriously accurate representation of the energy we need to produce to meet our demand.
I agree with you about the need for further education of the amount of energy we as consumers use but I also think that smart meters are a huge part of that in the long run. There is a great website from the
Energy Saving Trust full of hints and tips on how to save energy.
I think the hints and tips from the Energy Saving Trust was written over 30 years ago @
Beki_EONNext and I don't think the quoted savings are anywhere near accurate. When I was talking about education I had in mind schools teaching something as basic as how much a 3kw kettle costs to boil etc, but I think sadly our education system is becoming something of a lost cause.
I dislike the Standing Charge (when the prices is anywhere near the price per kWh) and think that it is counter productive in efforts to save energy. I'm not having a go at Eon-next or any other provider as they're all doing what they're allowed to do. It's been a mild winter but over the last 12 months, I've paid more in gas standing charges than I have for actual gas used. As a consumer that tells me the pricing structure is wrong and I might as well use as much gas as I want. For electricity over the same period, my SC was 43% of my total bill so again there's little incentive to save energy.
I sort of understand the logic of the IHD, that if you turn something off it goes down, but if people knew that replacing their 20 year old fridge freezer with a new one they could save over £50/year (x2 or x3 at current rates), wouldn't that be better? Better still explain exactly how and why they'd save that.
The problem is of course is that GENERALLY people aren't interested, they just moan and pay it.
A good example is petrol. I remember when petrol hit £1 per gallon and the furore it caused, similarly when the Chancellor would stick a penny on in the Budget.
Ask a 100 drivers at any filling station how much one gallon of petrol is, if more than 5 know I would be staggered. My point is that people now don't care, they moan a little bit but just pay. Similarly if the Chancellor puts 2p on a litre in the Budget it doesn't even create a ripple.
I suppose I'm back to education, my reasoning being that people knew what a gallon was but they don't know what a litre is it's relationship to a gallon. The same applies to gas and electric, people generally have no idea how much appliances use, what a kWh is, understand their bills etc, or even dare I say manage their household properly.
Just fitting smart meters isn't the answer, it'll make a very small difference in my opinion.