News

Energy Management System Financing by Incenergy

Facility managers can finance an energy management system from Incenergy with no down payment and gain immediate financial energy cost savings. Lower utility bills offset the minimal financing costs, conserve capital, and use leftover savings to increase overall purchasing power.

Incenergy Featured in BBC Horizons Video Series

Incenergy was recently featured in the Wind Power episode of BBC's Horizons- An Insight into the Future of Global Business video series.

Red State, Green City: How Austin Has Become America's Clean-Tech Hub

Read this week's Time magazine to see how Incenergy is playing a role in Austin's clean tech community that is developing the energy internet.

Smart Building Yields Sharp Savings

Does it take an entirely new HVAC system to save big money on energy costs in a commercial high-rise? Maybe not.

Incenergy Advanced Energy Management System Gives 20 Percent Energy Cost Savings to Dallas Office Tower

AUSTIN, Texas -– Incenergy, a Smart Building pioneer that develops an advanced energy management system targeting many of the low-rise buildings in the four million plus light commercial market, successfully scaled its Smart Building EMS solution to a 17-floor office tower in Dallas. 

Incenergy goes for water, gas

A local company that develops energy-use monitoring software is expanding to water and gas after a year of working on the Pecan Street Project.

Incenergy LLC, an energy management software company and systems integrator, is best known for being selected in 2010 to deploy an advanced smart grid system in the new Mueller community in Northeast Austin. While that system monitored electricity use, the newly launched system — which is wireless — includes the other utilities to target commercial and residential customers.

Austin startup Incenergy wins first contract from Pecan Street Project

Pecan Street Project offers sneak peek at smart-grid monitoring project

By Barry Harrell, American-Statesman Staff

A look into what could be the future of America's energy grid is on the screen of Bert Haskell's iPhone.

Haskell, technology director of the Pecan Street Project Inc. , a clean-energy consortium, is in a home in Austin's Mueller development, where a program on his iPhone is monitoring the home's energy use.

The display shows a sudden jump.

"What's that?" asks Merrill Smith, a visitor from the U.S. Department of Energy.

US News & World Report names Austin in Top 10 Smart Grid Cities

By Alex Kingsbury

The nation's power grid is being renovated as the country moves towards smart grid technology. The upgrade will facilitate a range of new technologies, from more efficient appliances to solar and wind farms. While it will take decades for the entire grid to wise up, it is already a reality in dozens of cities around the country, as utility companies operate pilot programs to test the technology before rolling out the systems nationwide.

Texas Smart Grid Experts Head to the White House

Pecan Street Project joins Smart Grid entourage from Texas for White House talks.

By Kate Galbraith

On Friday morning [May 20], a small group of Texans, including the chairman of the Public Utility Commission, will brief White House representatives on the smart-meter rollout and related issues in the state.

"There is a lot of experimentation and research going on in Texas," said Brewster McCracken, executive director of the Pecan Street Project, an Austin-based smart-grid project, who will attend the White House meeting.

Incenergy Wins Central Texas Electric Firm

Austin-based Incenergy, a provider of both smart grid software and energy management systems integration, said today that it has inked a deal with Bluebonnet Electric Cooperative. Incenergy said it will provide its software platform to Bluebonnet's residential members, as part of a smart grid pilot program. The firm's tools will be used to provide energy information and allow users to manage their electricity usage. Financial impact of the win was not disclosed. Bluebonnet serves 14 counties in Central Texas.

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