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NEWS RELEASE

California Department of General Services

 DATE:   November 13, 2009  CONTACT:  
Eric Lamoureux
 FOR RELEASE:   IMMEDIATE
 NUMBER:   916-376-5037  INTERNET:   www.dgs.ca.gov

State Buildings Plug into Smart Grid
Department of General Services takes part in Federally Funded  ‘Smart Meter’ program

Sacramento, Calif - The State of California is partnering with the Sacramento Municipal Utility District (SMUD) in Sacramento’s Smart Grid Stimulus federal grant program.  The $127.5 million program is funded by the US Department of Energy as part of the American Recovery & Reinvestment Act of 2009. DGS is the lead agency managing the program for state office buildings, and the program is designed to explore how to design, run, and manage an urban “smart grid” utility system with different types, and sizes, of clients.

“The Department of General Services is pleased to be able to extend the Governor’s Green Building Initiative to Sacramento’s Smart Grid project,” said Ron Diedrich, Acting Director of the Department of General Services.  “With this project we can show how a group of state buildings, a new and advanced central plant that supplies heating and cooling to all of them, and an innovative utility company, can work together to reduce energy consumption and lower our costs.”

Furthering the Governor’s Green Building Initiative, the state’s portion of the program includes matching funds to add advanced building automation systems to energy efficiency and retrofitting projects already scheduled for a number of state owned buildings in downtown Sacramento. Smart meters will be installed, as well as software to monitor and manage building energy use.

A crucial component of this project is the state’s recently completed Central Plant. The 78,000-square-foot, LEED Gold rated facility is the largest of its kind in the western United States and is the main conduit for heating, cooling and providing air control to 23 other state buildings including the Capitol.

The installation of the smart meters enable the Central Plant to communicate with the other state buildings, creating a smart network of buildings all linked into the power grid. During peak demand times, the smart meters give the Plant the ability to respond in real time to energy demands either by shedding or generating appropriate energy load independent of the power grid. The meters in turn provide SMUD with a more accurate gauge of actual energy use, making future consumption more visible and potentially saving money. The other partners in the project are California State University, Sacramento, and the Los Rios Community College District.

DGS’s Ron Diedrich will attend a Congressional Update Friday Nov. 13, 2009 at California State University, Sacramento co-hosted by Congresswoman Doris Matsui (D-Sacramento). The Congresswoman will be giving a brief speech about clean energy, education and the strategic importance of the Smart Grid Stimulus victory.

 

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