SAN FRANCISCO—Sales of semiconductors used in smart electricity meters are projected to grow to $1.1 billion in 2016 from $505.6 million in 2011, due to rapid growth expected for the devices, according to market research firm IHS iSuppli.
IHS projects that global shipments of smart meters will triple during the same period, reaching 62 million units in 2016. The firm cited the capability of smart meters to save energy and to improve the efficiency of electrical grids for the growth projection.
Jacobo Carrasco Heres, industrial electronics research analyst for IHS, said through a statement that the original incentive for utilities to replace conventional meters with smart meters was energy savings. "However, a more compelling incentive is the instrumentation of the grid," Heres said. "With the use of smart meters, utilities finally will have a well-mapped grid that will enable them to plan electrical generation and manage their resources more efficiently."
Logic ICs—mainly metrology ICs and communications ICs—stand to benefit the most from the growth of smart meters, IHS said. The next biggest opportunity is for microcomponents such as microcontrollers, digital signal processors and microprocessors, the firm said.
Smart meters also are making greater use of SoCs, which will integrate most of the functionality of the product into a single device, IHS said.
Although both smart meter shipments and the market for smart meter semiconductors will continue to expand in the coming years, revenue in both areas will flatten starting in 2015, according to IHS.
Chip sales for smart meters set to double
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