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Energy Management 101. Lance Stewart Facilities Maintenance Manager/Energy Manager City of Charlottesville, Virginia. Cost control Monitoring energy consumption. Baseline comparisons Energy Star ICMA Center Performance Measurements. Energy Manager’s Checklist. Cost Control: E= $ ¢ 2.
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Energy Management 101 Lance Stewart Facilities Maintenance Manager/Energy Manager City of Charlottesville, Virginia
Cost control Monitoring energy consumption Baseline comparisons Energy Star ICMA Center Performance Measurements Energy Manager’s Checklist
Cost Control: E=$¢2 City of Charlottesville, Virginia • FY 2007-08 General Fund budget for utilities = $2.96 million • Schools = $1.15 million • Municipal buildings = 1.07 million • Street lighting = $.74 million • 2.2% of General Fund • Represents 6¢ of real estate tax rate
Monitoring Energy Consumption • First Priority – Establishment of YOUR baseline • What is your historical energy usage? • Every facility • Every utility account • Minimum 1 year data
Baseline Comparisons - National • ICMA Center for Performance Measurement • Trade publications • EPA’s Energy Star Portfolio Manager - accounts for many variables, including: • Occupancy density • Size • Hours of operation • Climate
Baseline Comparisons - Regional • Establish network of others in your area • Share ideas • Share resources • Your region = your weather • ICMA Center for Performance Measurement, Virginia Performance Consortium
Goal Setting • Energy Star Certification • LEED (new Buildings) • LEED-EB (existing buildings) • Short-term, long-term % reduction goal for entire building portfolio • Facility-specific goals • Environmental impact
Key Performance Measures • Annual – Portfolio vs. Individual Facilities • Cost per square foot • Kilowatt hours per square foot • Cubic feet natural gas per square foot • Thousand British Thermal Units (MBTUs) per square foot • Electricity – kilowatt hours x 3.142 • Natural gas – cubic feet x 1.031 • Tons of Carbon Dioxide per square foot • Electricity – (kilowatt hours x 1.285) / 2,000 • Natural gas – (cubic feet x .120593) / 2,000 • Major benefit – identifying opportunities
Key Performance Measures • Monthly Analysis • kWh / Ft3 / MBTUs per square foot per day • Utility billing periods vary from month to month, even from account to account • Building A – current month versus last month, same month last year • Building A vs. average of all other buildings • Major Benefit – Identifying Problems • Seasonal? Building use? Leaks?
Keys to Improving Performance • Due diligence • Timely monthly analysis and review • Right people at the table = energy manager + maintenance staff • Effort – strive to devote as much time to this as utility budget = % of facilities budget • 50% budget = 50% of effort • Preventive maintenance
Keys to Improving Performance • Ask questions – • What’s wrong? • Why? • What can we do about it? • Targeted investments • Dreaded “low hanging fruit” • Lowest performing buildings, largest buildings
Energy Manager’s Checklist Infrastructure improvements • Planned equipment replacements more energy efficient • Building Automation System • Lighting upgrades • Energy Performance Contracts
Infrastructure Improvements • Retro-commissioning HVAC systems • Energy Performance Contracting • Options for funding • Extension of staff • Large, fast impact • Capital investments include life cycle cost estimate, ROI, and in light of overall environmental goals
Coordination Efforts Wise use of buildings Formal policies Communication with building occupants Energy Manager’s Checklist
Lights on for fast re-entry Copier ready to go if needed at 3:00 AM Mini-fridge moved below thermostat to keep office nice and cool for summer Space heater hidden under desk Cappuccino machine shiny Building Occupant’s Checklist
“Discretionary”Energy Consumption • Building-Related Energy Consumption • ~ 60% Heating, Air Conditioning, Ventilation • ~ 40% Lighting, computers, etc. • Estimated energy used at discretion of occupants ~ 15%
Bridging the Gap • How to turn Snidely Whiplash into Dudley Do-Right? • Snidely has his own mission • Snidely doesn’t care about your mission • Snidely doesn’t even know your mission
Environmental Sustainability Program • Intent: Reduce consumption of electricity and natural gas, thereby reducing greenhouse gas emissions, and reduce consumption of water. • Goal of 10% net reduction, to be achieved through: • Thoughtful building use • Education and outreach • Infrastructure improvements • Incentive program
Thoughtful Building Use • Building Automation System • Scheduling standard operating hours for lights, HVAC • Special events scheduling • Building use recommendations – limit and/or consolidate after-hour and summer events to minimize energy footprint
Education/Outreach • Monthly meetings with principals/designees to review energy trends, identify savings opportunities • Sample lesson plans to relate energy/environmental issues to curriculum • “Everyone” emails, with monthly energy savings tips, updates • School Board updates • Presence at Quarterly “Principals Meetings”
Incentive Program • Quarterly budgets goals established for utility consumption for each school • Based on historical seasonal and consumption trends • Normalized for fairness to $1.20 per square foot for 12 months
Incentive Program • Monthly Most-Efficient School Award • Trophy • Lunch for staff • Competition fierce!
First-Year Results • Consumption reductions by utility type • Electricity 11% • Natural gas 16% • Water 22% • Total utility expenditures ~$160K less than previous fiscal year, despite 8% net increase in utility prices • Disbursements to Schools - $45,337 • After disbursements, ended FY06-07 under budget ~$62K