Con Edison Providing Smart Gas Detectors In Major Breakthrough For Customer Safety
Con Edison is set to install 376,000 smart natural gas detectors across New York City and Westchester County by 2025, as part of a $130 million initiative. This follows a successful pilot involving 9,000 detectors, which recorded 250 alarms since October 2018. The detectors enhance safety by alerting customers to gas leaks and notifying emergency responders. Each installation is free and takes less than an hour, without needing to turn off gas service. The devices have varying lifespans, with the latest models lasting up to 10 years.
- Installation of 376,000 smart gas detectors enhances safety for 1.1 million customers.
- The $130 million program is fully funded by Con Edison, with no cost to customers.
- None.
NEW YORK, Sept. 28, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- Con Edison is installing 376,000 smart-technology natural gas detectors for customers in New York City and Westchester County, providing an unprecedented level of protection against potentially dangerous leaks.
The distribution of the detectors follows a successful pilot in which Con Edison provided 9,000 detectors. Those detectors sounded 250 alarms since the first installations in October 2018.
The company places the detectors at the spot inside the building where the gas service line enters. When the detector senses natural gas, it sounds an alarm and voice warning. It also alerts operators at Con Edison's Gas Emergency Response Center, who notify the local fire department.
"This is a life-saving technology," said Marc Huestis, Con Edison's senior vice president, Gas Operations. "These detectors urge anyone nearby to leave and prompt a swift response from our gas crews and the local fire department so that they can shut off the gas, find the leak and make it safe."
The alarm will sound until Con Edison silences the unit. The voice recording advises occupants to evacuate and call 911 from outside the building.
Using a phone, turning lights, appliances or a flashlight on or off, lighting a match or starting a car can create a spark and cause the gas to ignite.
New Rochelle resident Clarence Stanley was part of the pilot program and he's thankful that he was.
One night this summer, he got out of bed to watch TV and catch up on sports scores and the political shows he enjoys when he heard the alarm. He woke his wife and called Con Edison from a phone not located near the basement. A Con Edison representative who answered advised him to leave the house.
By the time of his call, Con Edison and New Rochelle fire personnel were already on their way. As the Stanleys waited outside, the crews arrived.
It turned out that there was a small gas leak, which Con Edison repaired.
"This is an extra layer of protection and I'm glad we had it," Stanley said of the device. "It was a small leak but this ultra-sensitive device detected it."
Con Edison was the first utility in the United States to deploy the technology, a product of New Cosmos, when it began the pilot in Lower Manhattan and several Westchester County communities.
The company has 376,000 gas service lines, which carry gas from the main in the street to the customer's home or business. Those lines serve the company's 1.1 million gas customers. The service line usually enters the building in the basement near the gas meter.
The company will install all the detectors by 2025 under a
The devices will not detect gas in other areas of a building. Con Edison recommends that building owners and tenants place gas detectors in areas where natural gas appliances are used.
The current version of the detector lasts six years. Due to technology improvements, those installed starting in the middle of next year will last seven years and those installed starting in 2023 will have a 10-year lifespan.
How to Recognize a Gas Leak
A person in a building may smell natural gas before the detector's alarm sounds. If you think you smell gas, act fast. Leave the home or business and take others with you. Report the leak by calling 911 or 1-800-75CONED once you are safely outside. Do not assume that someone else will call.
Natural gas carries an odorant that smells like rotten eggs. A leak may cause a roaring, hissing or whistling sound. See other natural gas safety tips.
Con Edison is a subsidiary of Consolidated Edison, Inc. [NYSE: ED], one of the nation's largest investor-owned energy companies, with approximately
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SOURCE Consolidated Edison Company of New York
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