
Puerto Rico utility LUMA Energy announced Friday it has begun installing smart meters across the island, marking “a significant milestone in modernizing the electrical grid, improving energy efficiency, and creating a more modern, resilient, and sustainable energy system.”
The island’s first smart meter was installed at the Nemesio Canales public housing complex in San Juan, the utility said.
LUMA aims to install 1.5 million Itron smart meters across Puerto Rico. The meter vendor said in December that it expects the rollout to take three years.
The addition of advanced metering “is a fundamental step in our commitment to modernize Puerto Rico’s energy infrastructure,” Juan Rodríguez, LUMA senior vice president of capital programs, said in a statement. “This technology optimizes consumption, improves efficiency, and empowers our citizens to make informed energy decisions.”
The meters will also reduce LUMA’s reliance on estimated billing and promote the integration of renewable energy sources, the utility said.
LUMA in February announced plans to add almost 1 GW of renewable energy and more than 700 MW of energy storage in its bid to transition away from fossil fuels and strengthen the island’s fragile electric grid. Puerto Rico is aiming to eliminate coal-fired generation by 2028 and develop a 100% renewable energy grid by 2050.
The island’s electric system was destroyed by Hurricane Maria in 2017, resulting in a full rebuild and the development of a plan to modernize and decarbonize the power grid.
The smart meters “will optimize the performance of the transmission and distribution grid while facilitating the integration of distributed energy resources like solar systems,” Luma said.
Itron’s platform, which is designed to have a redundant communications network, will feature advanced distributed grid intelligence and allow LUMA to improve system reliability, resilience and customer service, the utility said.
The platform will give customers more control over their energy consumption, LUMA said. It also will improve the company’s ability to interact with customers and improve response times during outages, support new efficiency programs and allow the adoption of distributed energy resources including solar panels, battery storage systems, home EV charging and microgrids, it said.
“The installation of these smart meters is central to our long-term goal of improving service to customers and ensuring that Puerto Rico becomes a leader in grid modernization in the Caribbean,” LUMA President and CEO Juan Saca said in a December statement.