Feb
9, 2003
Broadband Over Power Lines? Technology Spurs Surging Optimism
By Jim Suhr
The Associated Press
ST. LOUIS (AP) - Coming to a home or office
near you could be an electric Internet: high-speed Web access via ubiquitous power
lines, of all things, making every electrical outlet an always-on Web
connection.
If it sounds shocking, consider this: St. Louis-based Ameren
Corp. and other utilities already are testing the technology, and many consider
it increasingly viable.
This truly plug-and-play technology, if proven safe, has the
blessings of federal regulators looking to bolster broadband competition, lower
consumer prices and bridge the digital divide in rural areas.
Because
virtually every building has a power plug, it "could
simply blow the doors off the provision of broadband," Federal
Communications Commission chairman Michael Powell said last month.
For
competition's sake, "absolutely, we would applaud it," says Edmond
Thomas, chief of the FCC's Office of Engineering and Technology.
"We're
going to have an absolute stampede to move on this. This is a natural,"
said Alan Shark, president of the Power Line Communications Association, which
includes Internet providers such as Earthlink as well as utility companies.
"It'll change the way we do business on the Internet."
While
existing providers of broadband through cable TV lines or phone wires consider
the technology intriguing, they stress that talk of it has been around for
years, with nothing to show for it.
Existing broadband providers such as St. Louis-based Charter
Communications Inc., the nation's third-largest cable company, believe they
have the edge because they are known commodities and can bundle high-speed
Internet with video and even telephone service in some markets.
If ever deployed, power-line broadband "certainly is
competition, but we feel our product would stand up well," said David
Andersen, a spokesman for Charter, which has nearly 1.1 million high-speed
Internet customers.
Digital power lines are believed to be able to carry data at
roughly the same speeds as cable or DSL lines. And because electricity is more
prevalent in homes than cable or even telephone lines, a vast new
communications infrastructure could be born overnight - notably in rural areas,
where broadband access has lagged.
There,
the scarcity of potential subscribers hasn't justified the high cost of laying
cable or building satellite towers. A December 2001 report by the FCC-created
National Exchange Carrier Association estimated it would cost about $10.9
billion to wire all of rural America.
Even
where broadband is available, many people have trouble justifying spending $40
or $50 a month for it, about twice the cost of popular dial-up services.
Now
Ameren, which serves about 1.5 million electric customers in Missouri and Illinois, is
studying whether its portfolio could include broadband over its medium-voltage
distribution systems - and, more importantly, if it'd be profitable.
Keith
Brightfield, heading the project for Ameren, says it's too early to say when
the company could deploy the technology, and the utility makes no claims it can
deliver broadband cheaper than current providers. The goal, he said, is to be
competitive at Internet access without losing focus on Ameren's
bread-and-butter energy business.
Companies
have found that turning power lines into a stable, high-speed system of data
transmission is tricky. Network interference and such things as transformers
and surge arrestors have hindered broadband delivery.
But
over the past few years, Shark says, many of those hurdles have been cleared
with improved technology. Brightfield says previous efforts to deploy the
technology in Europe failed because their electric
system differs from that in the United States.
Still,
there's no shortage of skepticism.
"I
think they're a long ways from proving it, let's leave it there," said
Larry Carmichael, a project manager with the Electric Power Research Institute.
"The tests to date have been so small as far as looking at the financial
and technical viability. It's still at the very early stage of
development."
The
technology works like this: data is carried either by fiber-optic or telephone
lines to skip disruptive high-voltage lines, then is injected into the power
grid downstream, onto medium-voltage wires.
Because
signals can only make it so far before breaking apart, special electronic
devices on the line catch packets of data, then reamplify and repackage them
before shooting them out again.
Other
technologies use more elaborate techniques that detour the signal around
transformers.
Either
way, the signal makes its way to neighborhoods and customers who could access
either it wirelessly, through strategically placed utility poles, or by having
it zipped directly into their homes via the regular electric current. Adaptors
at individual power outlets ferry the data into computers through their usual
ports.
The nonprofit Douglas Electric Cooperative in Oregon, with more than
9,000 customers in a service territory the size of Delaware, hopes the
electric Internet technology can complement the co-op's high-speed fiber-optic
cabling, which is too pricey to extend to rural customers, said Mark Doty, a Douglas superintendent.
The co-op hopes to field test the technology as early as this
summer - nice timing for member Bart Exparza, who is fed up with his slow
dial-up connection at his home deep in Oregon's tree-lined, mountainous
countryside.
"Imagine the cartoon of a guy standing on top of his
computer, pulling his hair out. That's me," the self-employed electrical
contractor frets. "I just roll my eyes and think, 'Golly gee.'"
---
On
the Net:
Ameren,
http://www.ameren.com
Information
Technology Association of America, http://www.itaa.org
Power
Line Communications Association, http://www.plca.net
Electric
Power Research Institute, http://www.epri.com
AP-ES-02-09-03
1500EST
This story can be found at: http://ap.tbo.com/ap/breaking/MGA0QVDFZBD.html