Technology News  |   Industry News  |   Product News  |   Business News  |   Event News  |
  CCTV Surveillance  |   Access Control  |   Biometric ID  |   Alarm & Detection  |   Security Parts & Devices  |   Integration & Convergence  |
  Corporate & Office  |   Education & Institutional  |   Financial  |   Game & Casino  |   Government & Public  |   Homeland Security  |   Hospital & Entertainment  |   IT Asset & Technology  |
  CCTV Surveillance  |   Access Control  |   Biometric ID  |   Alarm & Detection  |   Security Parts & Devices  |   Integration & Convergence  |
  CCTV Surveillance  |   Access Control  |   Biometric ID  |   Alarm & Detection  |   Security Parts & Devices  |   Integration & Convergence  |   Consulting & Services  |
  Edit Member Profile  |  Edit Company Profile  |  Change Password  |  My Resources Profiles  
  2009 MAR Issue   |   What is Digital Magazine?  |  How to use  |  Archives  |    
 
  SecurityWorldMag.com

SecurityWorld Online Magazine

Technology News

Industry News

Product News

Business News

Event News

Home > News >

ZigBee to Find Traction in Commercial Building Aut

Sensor networking technology ZigBee should start finding significant adoption in commercial building applications in 2008, according to a new study published by ABI Research.

 

There are three major markets for sensor networking: the home, commercial buildings, and industrial facilities, and ZigBee aims to cover them all. In the home, there are alternatives to ZigBee, and in industry there are some questions about its suitability. But according to senior analyst Sam Lucero, commercial building automation is a market where ZigBee is competitively positioned against other wireless sensor technologies. ¡°Commercial buildings represent a huge addressable market of field equipment currently using wired field buses to connect sensors and actuators with lighting, heating, ventilation, access control, and safety systems,¡° he says. ¡°ZigBees features and functionality are very well suited to commercial building applications."

Of the five top vendors of building automation systems, which together control about 70% of the market, four -- Johnson Controls, Siemens, TAC, and Trane -- have introduced wireless products based on ZigBee in the past year, and the fifth -- Honeywell -- is moving toward doing so.

Over the next five years, up to 20% of commercial building automation system field equipment may "go wireless", seeking the lower costs, better control, and greater flexibility that such systems deliver. However, there are regional differences: in North America and Europe, commercial building markets are largely mature, while greater "Greenfield" opportunities can be found in Asia. Asian markets are fragmented, and we may see a rash of acquisitions as the big five" push into the region.

¡°In North America and Europe, this is a tough and conservative market,¡° says Lucero. ¡°We are hearing that building owners and managers in Asia are more interested in using wireless than their counterparts in North America and Europe, where it is more a question of replacing existing wires.¡° ABI Research also believes that a lot of the growth will come from new, application-specific deployments in selected vertical industries.

Lucero concludes, ¡°The mainstream market is clearly moving ahead with ZigBee for automation, so smaller players that do not have a wireless strategy formulated (or are in the process of creating one) will be at a disadvantage.¡°

 

For more information, send us your e-mails to swm@infothe.com.

¨Ï2007 www.SecurityWorldmag.com. All rights reserved.

 
 

     AES Corp., Connecting the Dots Wirelessly

     2007 Technology Trends



Wireless IP Cam...
Home Security S...
IP camera Netwo...
Home l New Product Showcase l Gold Suppliers l Trade Shows l email Newsletter l About SWM l Help l Site Map l Partnerships l Privacy Policy | Newsletter
Publisher: Choi Jung-sik | Edited by: Lee Sang-yul | Youth Protection Officer: Lee Sang-yul
Copyright Notice ¨Ï 2004-2007 www.SecurityWorldMag.com Corporation and its licensors. All rights reserved.