Smart Meter Slavery

Cassandra Anderson
Infowars.com
August 6, 2011

Smart Meter Fraud Smart meters are radio frequency microwave meters that communicate with the Smart Grid. The Smart Grid is a transmission system that delivers electricity to from power plants to distribution substations and then from the substations it is delivered to homes and businesses.

The federal Department of Energy (DOE) stated purpose of the Smart Grid is to reduce carbon emissions. Note to DOE: man-made global warming is a lie- go ask NASA, CERN and 30,000 independent scientists.

Carbon dioxide (CO2) is beneficial to plants- why do you think greenhouses pipe in carbon? Because it makes plants and crops more robust. According to Dr, Michael Coffman, a 500% increase in CO2 would only benefit plants and animals. It is absurd to consider CO2 a pollutant!

The Smart Grid is being used to promote green energy/clean energy/renewable energy. Because global warming (climate change) has been so thoroughly discredited, global warming policies and regulations are now being forced on us under the banner of green, clean and renewable energy. Global warming is a tool of Agenda 21 Sustainable Development, the overarching blueprint for depopulation and total control.

Water and natural gas Smart Meters are scheduled to launch next year. Again, the stated purpose is conservation of resources based on phony global warming myths. Smart Meters for water are particularly disturbing because there is a master kill switch on the grid and water is essential for life every day.

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My Opinion:
For what is happen in the United States of America is starting to happen in New Zealand and countries across the world; for what Alex Jones is telling to us is pretty coming true or already occur and he not joking about it; it’s all real. New Zealand and other countries is already heading into enslavement of Agenda 21. As a New Zealander that why I look at the news source on infowars.com

Smart water meters pondered

NZ Herald
By John Cousins
7:44 AM Tuesday Jul 30, 2013

Smart meters enabling Tauranga householders to keep a much tighter control on water usage could be installed within the next two years.

The technology involves the remote activation of a radio signal from a transponder attached to the meter.

An advantage is that the householder can set a limit on how much they want to pay for water so that when the figure is exceeded, it triggers an alarm.

Tauranga City Council water engineers are reviewing the business case for introducing new technologies to replace the manual reading of the city’s 50,000 meters.

Council water services team leader Peter Bahrs said no case would be taken to the council until it made economic sense.

In the meantime, three meter readers were enough to service the city’s quarterly billing system and there were no immediate plans to replace them. New meters which were being installed were capable of being retro-fitted with new remote-reading technologies, Mr Bahrs said.

Automatic water metering was valuable in alerting the council and residents to leaks much sooner than every three months. It also allowed people to see what they were using on a day-to-day basis.

On a straight meter-reading basis, the financial benefits did not stack up to replace meter readers with the new technologies. The business case would only make sense when the benefits of tracking down leaks more rapidly were added to the equation, with the subsequent savings in water-treatment costs.

Mr Bahrs said they had put a lot of work into the new meters, including trialling 300 properties in Windermere. Instead of a meter reader taking one day to cover Windermere, a specially equipped truck driving around the same streets could do the job in 15 minutes.

The meter replacement programme would be escalated in two years, he said. This meant they needed to have a clear understanding of the business case by then so they could decide whether the council went ahead with the new meters.

They were looking at three technology packages. These were walk-by remote reading, drive-by remote reading or a fully automated system involving signals from each meter sent directly to a centralised computer. The fully automatic system was the most expensive to set up because a network of electronic collectors needed to be installed around the city.

He said they were trading off capital costs versus operational costs and working out where the balance stacked up.

“We believe we will have an answer sooner rather than later. The issue is, does it stack up?”

The council would review the business case every six months on the basis of what was happening to the water business. “If it stacks up we will move it forward, but I’m reluctant to say when exactly.”

Tauranga’s water-supply business

Costs $17.3 million a year to run.

50,000 customers.

Volumetric metered charge $1.73 per cubic metre.

Fixed domestic charge $27 per annum.

Water losses between treatment plants and taps 15 per cent.

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