PACIFIC Control Systems has launched a range of smart energy meters to ascertain how much energy individual devices in the home are using. The range is part of the leading global automation company’s smart metering technology applied in its Green Home, Green Building Automation and Smart Grid segments of the market.

Dilip Rahulan, chairman and CEO, Pacific Controls Systems, says: “Our range of smart energy meters will help users to optimise their energy usage while minimising wastage and reducing consumption levels. Our energy management tools will help home and building owners to create energy management profiles that are triggered by certain established consumption rates.
“As energy consumption exceeds a specific value, the system can automatically begin turning off low-priority lighting, heating and cooling zones. Pacific Controls’ real-time energy usage indices will help consumers understand their habits and help become more efficient with their energy consumption needs.
Pacific Controls’ energy monitoring software is the most advanced fully browser-based solution he says. It provides comprehensive and intuitive analysis for organisations of any size, across any industry sector, he says.
It automatically turns energy data into information, measures the carbon footprint and validates carbon financial instruments of the asset. It also provides early warnings on energy consumption data to manage power usage within the desired thresholds. This addresses the slab tariff system and assists in ensuring that asset owners can manage measure and verify their energy consumption.
These services are offered by Pacific Controls to customers globally from the energy services global command control centre established at its headquarters building in Techno Park Dubai.
The smart energy meters offer technology that integrates multiple systems into a single open platform. The product range introduced are the B2000 series – a three-phase multifunction energy meter; C1000 series – a single-phase multifunctional energy meter; the GPRS/GSM-based energy data concentrator; the single-phase eight-channel power line carrier energy meter; and the three-phase four-wire power line carrier energy meter.