By Elisa Wood
August 1, 2012
We don’t think about energy until something goes wrong, and
this week things went wrong on an historic level. As a result, the public and
pundits are again focusing on the fragility of big electric grids.
Ten percent of the world’s population – more than 600
million people – lost their power in India on July 31, marking the largest
blackout in history. India’s grid collapse follows the storm-related outages
that left Washington, D.C. sweltering for days when a freak super
derecho hit in June.
So the timing couldn’t be better to accelerate consumer
education about smart grid, and the non-profit Smart Grid Consumer Collaborative (SGCC)
is on the job.
Smart grid uses high tech devices to make the electric system
more sophisticated and less likely to fail. It also opens the way for a future
of decentralized power, where the home, the car, and office building, each become
power plants in their own right.
But smart grid requires a degree of customer energy self-management,
something foreign to most of us. So the energy industry has been working hard to
figure out how to interest consumers in the various energy displays,
time-of-use rates, smart meters and other tools of smart grid.
To do this, utilities must get inside the head of the
consumer, something Proctor & Gamble or Apple Computer do routinely, but
monopoly-based utilities have never before found necessary.
In an effort to help, SGCC recently not only asked consumers
what they think about smart grid, but also video-taped their responses. After
all, sometimes what we say only half reveals what we mean. How we say something
means a lot.
“It’s one thing
to read a one dimensional set of quotes. But it is another thing entirely to watch
consumers and hear them saying in their own words what they think and what they
know,” said Patty Durand, SGCC executive director, in a recent interview.
The group interviewed 24 consumers in Atlanta, Los Angeles
and Chicago. What did the interviews reveal, and how can the information help
utilities?
It turns out consumers do want data about their energy use,
but also want help understanding what it means and how to use it. They worry
about reliability and price and in some cases the environment. Most important,
says Durand, they don’t all think alike, so shouldn’t all be approached by
utilities in the same way.
Consumers generally fall into five categories, she said.
· Traditionals
– Often senior citizens who oppose change
· Do-it-yourselfers
– They want to save money and mange their spending
· Easy
Streets – Highly educated
consumers or those making a good income who want to save time and avoid waste
· Young
Americans – Those just starting out who don’t know much about smart grid but
want to learn
· Concerned
Greens – Environmentally motivated individuals who are highly likely to embrace
smart grid
Each of these groups responds differently to smart grid
pitches. Utilities will be best able to capture consumer interest if they tailor
messages to each, she said.
For example, information about renewable energy will
resonate with Concerned Greens and Easy Streets, while it will irritate the
Traditionals. They might respond better to a message that emphasizes US competitiveness.
“There are so many opinions and passions around energy and the environment that
the targeted message is better,” Durand said.
The bottom line is that utilities for years have treated
customers as “monoliths,” she said. Watching consumers in action, on video,
makes clear the differences in consumer concerns and interests. “Education is key, but it needs to be
carefully deployed.”
Elisa Wood is a
long-time energy writer whose articles are available at RealEnergyWriters.com
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