Control4 Brings Smart Grid to Homes
NV Energy will equip Homes with Control4 Energy Management Systems.
February 3, 2011

Control4 has announced NV Energy in Nevada will roll out energy management systems based on its EMS 100 platform. This milestone represents the "go to market" culmination of a product development effort launched in mid-2009 with venture capital funding.
NV Energy plans to offer Control4 EC-100 touchscreen controllers and ZigBee wireless thermostats to “a minimum of 20,000” customers that opt into its energy management program. Control4 says it has a purchase order for 20,000 EMS systems (one thermostat, one EC-100 per household) to be shipped in May. As part of its NVEnergize smart grid deployment, NV Energy will provide customers with energy consumption and cost information and allow them to voluntarily participate in demand response (DR) events.
Per CE Pro Richard Walker, president of Control4 Energy Systems, says consumers will be able to use their EC-100 touchscreens to opt into utility programs to shed loads at peak times. For example, an energy-conscious household might give the OK to cut back the air conditioning when electricity is in high demand.
The EC-100 being deployed by NV is a complete home control system, equivalent to Control4’s HC-200 (retail $399) with integrated touchscreen but without the inputs/outputs. It communicates via ZigBee Pro to smart devices in the home and potentially a smart meter with an energy profile. The unit communicates to the utility via Wi-Fi and the home network.
The unit could be used to control lights and appliances – including load-shed modules – but those devices are not being deployed en masse by NV Energy.
Walker says that NV Energy selected Control4 because “we have a platform they can add to.” He says the utility hasn’t exactly said they’re going to build out a NV Energy app store … but they could. NV Energy has not announced a pricing plan for the EMS systems, but Walker did say the utility had big plans to promote the program through national outreach starting in June.
The Control4 products will be professionally installed by a number of potential providers – potentially retailers to companies that specialize in doing installations,” Walker says.
Numerous demand-response pilot programs have been launched nationwide over the past decade, but Control4 believes the NV Energy implementation is the first full-fledged utility rollout in the U.S.

The project is powered at the back-end by Control4’s new Advantage platform (shown above) for utilities. The platform enables remote management of the home area network (HAN), secondary communications for demand response and pricing, and advanced data collection and device control. "The Advantage API and Advantage Console allows utilities to deploy similar network management strategies for their other assets (computers, smart meters) as they can for deployed HAN devices," says Paul Nagel, VP of business development for Control4. It also provides richer features than what is currently defined by the ZigBee Smart Energy Profile (SEP), according to Nagel: "The Advantage API exposes advanced data logging, device capability and control not provided under ZigBee SEP1.0 or 2.0. This allows a more feature rich experience on the customer facing Web portal provided by the utility for their customers."