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Communicating 'smartness': smart meter installers in UK homes
Panel: 9. Dynamics of consumption
This is a peer-reviewed paper.
Authors:
Sarah Darby, ECI - Energy Group. Environmental Change Institute, University of Oxford, United Kingdom
Christine Liddell, University of Ulster, United Kingdom
Abstract
There is growing interest in ‘middle actors’ as influences on energy use in the built environment. This paper reports on novel research with four focus groups of meter installers, employed by three major energy suppliers, two in Great Britain and one in Northern Ireland. All the participants have been involved in installing smart meters or semi-smart keypad meters in homes. The Smart Metering Installation Code of Practice requires installers to be trained to communicate to householders the uses of, and potential benefits from, smart metering, along with any health and safety issues. Installers are also required to demonstrate how to use the in-home display that is offered to all customers, and to be able to give basic advice on energy efficiency. The smart meter rollout thus offers an opportunity for a representative of the supplier to go into every customer’s home and talk about energy with household members.
Using transcripts from the focus groups, we analyse what the installers have to say about their work in terms of training, support, challenges, rewards, household priorities and concerns, and organisational issues. This material illustrates the social learning that can take place during and around the time of installation, for the utility and the installers themselves, as well as among the households concerned, and their social networks. It highlights issues for policymakers and other actors when planning and evaluating smart metering in terms of customer benefits, particularly energy efficiency and demand reduction. To set the focus group material in context, the paper draws on findings from the UK Smart Metering Early Learning Project, published in 2015, which included a large-scale household survey.
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Download this presentation as pdf: 9-050-15_Darby_pre.pdf
Download this paper as pdf: 9-050-15_Darby.pdf
Panels of
1. Foundations of future energy policy
2. Energy efficiency policies – how do we get it right?
4. Mobility, transport, and smart and sustainable cities
5. Energy use in buildings: projects, technologies and innovation
6. Policies and programmes towards a zero-energy building stock
7. Appliances, product policy and the ICT supply chain
8. Monitoring and evaluation: building confidence and enhancing practices