Open Automated Demand Response

Open Automated Demand Response (openADR) is a research and standards development effort for energy management led by North American research labs and companies.

In its early phrases, "the OpenADR research has been carried out by LBNL Demand Response Research Center (DRRC) which is managed by Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. The specification was released in April 2009.[1] By contrast, the related openHAN standard for home area networks was promoted by utilities themselves and is an attempt to reconcile various home control technologies including X-10, Insteon, P1901 and HomePlug.

An Open Automated Demand Response (OpenADR) outreach collaborative was eventually formed in October 2010 [2] and a related OpenADR Alliance "to accelerate the development, adoption and compliance of OpenADR standards throughout the energy industry" [3] and "provide common language" [4] for smart meters. The effort sought publicity for its attempt to unify smart grid plans under a common standards umbrella to form a viable cleantech industry with a relatively level playing field.[5] As NIST and NERC were committed to the openADR approach all along and the National Broadband Plan (United States) required (in its "goal 6") open access to consumer power use data by ADR providers, there was probably little doubt of the standards influence.[6]

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