John Joyce, president and CEO of Ambient, said: “The possibility of leaving assets stranded without a clear road map or without a viable option for incorporating such assets into a smart grid platform has prevented many utilities from deploying smart grid technology.

“The new EDC module, developed with cooperation from Itron, gives utilities a critical migration path linking their legacy meters to newer advanced communications systems without stranding recently deployed assets.”

The EDC is an optional module integrated into Ambient’s smart grid node. Installed at various points along the distribution grid and collecting data from surrounding meters, the EDC eliminates the need to drive-by each meter to collect meter reads.

The EDC listens for messages from meters equipped with ERT modules and automatically collects and stores that data. The frequency of reads and amount of time the information is stored are configurable by the utility. Using the new EDC module, utilities would be able to get data periodically for near real-time meter reads, along with outage detection, instead of once-a-month or estimated reads, the companies said.

Russ Vanos, director of marketing, Itron, said: “Itron has always believed in the value migration brings to utilities as their business needs for automation continue to grow. We look forward to working with our partners to create an open, industry standard smart grid environment. Ambient’s EDC module provides another valuable tool our customers can use, especially those that are looking for ways to bridge to Itron’s OpenWay solution.”

Data collected by the EDC module will be transferred to the utility’s meter collection software, and eventually to their billing system, as Ambient and Itron work together to complete the end-to-end process.