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Technology

The technology that smart meters use

Smart meters measure your consumption in the same way that any other modern digital meter does. They then send this information to ESB Networks using radiofrequency transmissions – basically, the identical technology as a 2G mobile phone. So you can think of the information as being sent in a text message. The FAQs below give more detail on the technology used and how it affects the transmissions that the meter sends.

Frequently asked questions

How does a smart meter measure the electricity consumption?

Older electricity meters used the power flowing into the home to drive round a rotating disk and counted the revolutions to measure consumption.  All modern meters, including smart meters, use solid-state measuring devices which do away with the mechanical rotating disk.

How does it communicate with the electricity company?

Across the world, different countries have chosen different technologies to communicate data on consumption from the meter to the electricity company, but the vast majority use some form or other of radio communication – sending the information using wireless, or radiofrequency, transmissions.


In Ireland, all the meters currently being installed will use mobile-phone technology. Some of the meters use only the older and more basic 2G system, some can use either that or one of the narrow-band 4G channels available for the ‘Internet of Things’. None use 5G. Each smart meter has within it the equivalent of the transmitter and antenna of a mobile phone, and it uses these to send data over a network to ESB Networks. Each time the meter sends data it is very much like sending a text message or a single short email from a mobile phone.


Once a specific meter has been installed, the technologies it uses will not change. But in the future, it is possible that new smart meters installed might use different technologies.

How often does it communicate?

Once a day, normally around midnight, your meter will send ESB Networks the total amount of electricity consumed and exported over the previous 24-hour period. Approximately every two hours, each smart meter will activate itself to check its integrity and connection to the network and will send details of any electricity exported onto the network and, if necessary, any problems. If you have chosen to provide your 30-minute electricity consumption data to your Supplier this will also be sent from the meter every two hours.


Each message will take only a fraction of a second to send – as noted above, in terms of the content, they are basically very similar to a text message.


In the future, smart meters will allow the electricity supply companies to offer you new products and services. For example, you could choose to switch to a tariff that varied through the day (more expensive in peak hours than off-peak or at night). More options will emerge as we all explore what smart technology can offer. These options might involve more frequent sending of data between meter and ESB Networks, though each separate communication would still be a very short package of data, similar to a text message. And in all those examples, it would be your choice whether to take up the option offered

Does it communicate within the home?

Part of the longer-term vision for smart meters does involve the meter communicating within the home. For instance, you could have a display in the home to tell you about your current consumption, and that would receive data by communicating with the smart meter. Those communications would usually also be by radiofrequencies, although, as the range required (just within the home, not outside it) would be smaller, the power level of the communications would be very low.


That lies in the future, however. In the first instance, the smart meters installed by ESB Networks will not have that functionality, they are simply replacements for your existing meter. And it would be your choice whether to adopt some of those functions and capabilities in future.


One other development is that, in future, smart gas meters send their consumption data to the smart electricity meter, so that the electricity meter can then send both sets of consumption to ESB Networks. Again, that link between the gas meter and the electricity meter would be short range and therefore low power.

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