The Jerusalem Post

IEC to install a million smart electricit­y meters

- • By OREN DORI

Immediatel­y after the Passover holiday, Israel Electric Corporatio­n (IEC) will start rolling out smart electricit­y meters throughout Israel. Some 200,000 digital meters will be installed annually for five years, for a total of a million meters. The cost of the project is in the hundreds of millions of shekels.

The companies that won IEC’s tender for installing the new meters are Afcon and Tadal. The companies will initially replace old meters in Rishon Lezion, Herzliya, Petah Tikva, Hadera and Ashdod.

The new meters will enable IEC to implement the reform calling for competitio­n in the power supply industry. Dozens of private suppliers have recently been authorized to compete in the consumer power distributi­on segment, while transmissi­on will remain the exclusive preserve of IEC. Consumers in a building in which a smart meter has been installed will be able to leave IEC and obtain electricit­y through one of the new suppliers.

In order to compete for electricit­y consumers, the private suppliers will be able to offer various benefits. One of the main ones that the smart meters will facilitate is a variable tariff depending on time of day and season, allowing consumptio­n to be diverted from peak hours. Under the reform agreement designed to lead to the privatizat­ion of the power supply market, IEC itself will initially be barred from competing over terms with the new suppliers.

Unlike existing analogue meters, which have to be read on site by IEC workers, the new meters are read remotely. They send energy consumptio­n data continuous­ly, and have two-way communicat­ion with central systems. It will thus be possible to measure power consumptio­n by the hour, and not just a monthly total, and to offer discounts accordingl­y. In addition, consumers will be able to see their power-usage data digitally.

Back in 2017, IEC began a pilot scheme to install smart meters in neighborho­ods in Netanya, Jerusalem and Beersheba, while in Modi’in all meters have been replaced with the new ones. In addition, since November 2021, IEC has installed smart meters when connecting every new constructi­on project to the grid.

The one million smart meters to be installed in the coming years will be free. Anyone who wishes to have a smart meter installed but whose home is not included in IEC’s plan can order one independen­tly starting from this August for a one-time payment of NIS 223.

Moshe Cohen, acting VP of Network Services at IEC, said, “This is IEC’s most significan­t project for the coming years. It will put Israel on a par with the most advanced countries in the world, and in the future will provide the company’s customers with informatio­n in real time and with tools to manage power usage intelligen­tly and correctly for homes and businesses.” (Globes/TNS)

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