All Whirlpool Appliances to be ‘Smart’ by 2015

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Smart appliances for the smart grid

If a couple of conditions are met by the private and public sectors, the company will build only products that can communicate with a smart power grid.


May. 06, 2009 — by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)

Whirlpool is on a mission to smarten up its appliances.

By 2015, the company will “make all the electronically controlled appliances it produces—everywhere in the world—capable of receiving and responding to signals from smart grids,” says Bracken Darrell, president of Whirlpool Europe.

A smart grid is the wiser version of the old-fashioned electrical grid that powers this and other countries.

It enables communications between energy providers, consumers, and electronic devices, enabling the entire ecosystem to make smarter decisions about energy consumption.

Most notably, users will be able to make decisions based on the cost of electricity at any given moment – you know, like running the dishwasher in the middle of the night, rather than during the day when the electrical grid is over-burdened.

Today’s “smart meters” – the most visible reminders of the smart grid – allow utilities to vary their rates according to peak- and off-peak times.

But beyond that, the ecosystem is just beginning to get built.

What’s taking Whirlpool so long?
Whirlpool has been a front-runner in the race to deliver intelligent appliances, but the company hasn’t delivered much.

In the late 1990s, the company developed a full line of communicating products based on the Java-based Open Services Gateway Initiative (OSGi). Neither the products nor the initiative went anywhere. (UPDATE: Seems rumors of OSGi’s demise were exaggerated; see comment below from an exec with ProSys, developer of OSGi technology.)

Whirlpool’s most recent development for the connected kitchen, introduced last year, is Centralpark. The “connectivity” is little more than a power supply on the front of a freezer.

So will Whirlpool be able to deliver on its promise of an all-smart lineup?

Only if these two conditions are met, according to Darrell:

  • The development by the end of 2010 of an open, global standard for transmitting signals to and receiving signals from a home appliance
  • Appropriate policies that reward consumers, manufacturers and utilities for using and adding these new peak demand reduction capabilities


Whirlpool as been trying to come out with connected products since 2001, but so far has failed to deliver.



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