Japan Today reports that at a meeting on Nov. 2, its Energy Conservation Subcommittee Ministryy of Economy, Trade and Industry decided to start working group discussions with the aim of obtaining the possibility to remotely shuts down proprietary air conditioning/heating units.
The goal of course is to reduce usage energyς κατά τη διάρκεια των αναμενόμενων ελλείψεων ενέργειας, κάτι που η επιτροπή εξετάζει με αυξανόμενη ανησυχία καθώς η Japan προσπαθεί να στραφεί σε renewable energy sources such as solar energy.
But the amount produced can be affected by the daily climate making it very difficult to stabilize the total available power. The ministry says AC use accounts for about 30 percent of household electricity consumption in Japan.
From a technical point of view, the plan is not particularly difficult to implement.
Air conditioners have remote controls, so external inputs are not a problem, and many models now allow the owner to turn the system on and off or adjust temperature settings via the Internet.
By asking manufacturers to extend this access to government regulatory agencies and granting them such functions, the ministry's plan could be easily implemented in practice especially for Internet-connected ACs.
According to Japan Today, the committee is currently working on the idea that the government will only be able to shut down ACs if their owners have agreed to give up that power.