Technology clicks as the minister visits Isle of Wight

By Martin Neville

Saturday, October 20, 2012

 

Technology clicks as the minister visits Isle of Wight

From left TV presenter Quentin Wilson, Minister of state for energy and climate change John Hayes, with CEO of Ecoisland David Green and Isle of Wight MP Andrew Turner. Picture by Laura Holme.

ENERGY minister John Hayes proved a turn-off at the first Global Ecoislands Summit this week.

With the click of a mouse, the newly appointed minister of state for energy switched off a heater, a fridge and an electric vehicle charger in three Isle of Wight homes several miles away.

Mr Hayes was taking part in a demonstration of an ambitious 'smart grid’ system, backed by multinationals such as IBM, Cable & Wireless and Toshiba, which could slash consumers’ energy bills while helping to save the planet.

The experiment showed delegates from more than 30 islands and regions who attended the summit, at Cowes Yacht Haven, how people could soon be turning off their immersion heaters, dimming their lights or putting their computers on stand-by remotely from an iPad or smart phone 'app’, cutting power use.

The app could also show how people are using their energy and where savings could be made.

Delegates heard consumers could even opt to hand over control of some of their home appliances to the National Grid, which faces a daily balancing act of ensuring demand for electricity matches supply.

Homeowners would be able to over-ride the system at any time to ensure it did not switch off anything essential.

Giving the keynote address of the two-day summit, Mr Hayes, who arrived in a hydrogen-powered car, said the Island’s plans to deploy smart grid technologies and locally-owned renewables projects gave a template that could be replicated around the world.

The summit, attended by community leaders and technology giants, provided an opportunity for communities from as far afield as Tobago, Bornholm in Denmark and 15 Scottish islands to share ideas about self-sufficiency and sustainability and see the Isle of Wight’s Ecoisland project.

It included the signing of the Ecoislands’ Accord — a commitment to become clean energy self-sufficient by 2020 — and the launch of the Ecoislands’ anthem by Ecoislands’ ambassador Derek Sandy, beamed live into the room from Tobago, via Skype.

David Green, Ecoislands founder and chief executive, said: "Often it is the smallest places that can demonstrate the greatest change and it is time our political leaders took note the people want change."

• Next year’s summit is due to be held in Bornholm.

Reporter: martinn@iwcpmail.co.uk

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by peter williams

21st October 2012, at 11:49:15

i had no idea they had converted a yellow reliant van to hydrogen power, rodney will have to tell grandad not to smoke near it

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by kevin froment

21st October 2012, at 08:21:01

this must be a prepared statement, who would normally speak like this, and well done del boy, youve obviously learned how to flick a switch. they should rename the summit a jollyboys outing because it looks like a passport to see the world on someone elses pocket

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by Philip Yates

20th October 2012, at 22:01:09

Yep... thats Delboy, Would you buy one of these new fangled gas cars off him....
Delboy and the three wise men...

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by Don Prescott

20th October 2012, at 18:43:04

Nah, that is John Hayes, who although looking like Del Boy, is the Tory Minister who opened the phone box summit and who said at the Conservative Party Conference, "the high-flown theories of bourgeois Left-wing academics will not override the interests of ordinary people who need fuel for heat, light and transport – energy policies, you might say, for the many, not the few". You could not make this farce up could you? He says all that and then comes to Greens bunfight. Hayes' pledge has triggered fury from green activists, who fear reductions in the huge subsidies given to wind-turbine firms, which will obviously happen.

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by Richard Taylor

20th October 2012, at 17:48:05

I thought the guy in the beige mac was 'Del Boy' at first glance..........

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by Don Prescott

20th October 2012, at 17:09:52

Why has that Green bloke ALWAYS got shades on? Does he think that he is some sort of rock star? Noticeable that the CP have not published the "numbers" who turned up.
Watch the vid and count: 9 rows with about 16 people in each row = not a lot! Nowhere near the 500 plus "due to attend" boasted of by Mr. Green. There were more people at Carisbrooke High School when Cheverton got thrown out by the planning committee.
Next years summit to be held in Bornyesterday.

Any views or opinions presented in the comments above are solely those of the author and do not represent those of the Isle of Wight County Press.