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TeMA : Annual Updates from EE, Eco Dev, and Clean Air Tech. Safety Share. Today’s Agenda. Agenda. Introduction EE – New Measures and Updates EcoDev - Regional Overview CAT – EV Opportunities. CenterPoint Energy: An Electric and Natural Gas Utility. Electric Utility:
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Today’s Agenda Agenda • Introduction • EE – New Measures and Updates • EcoDev - Regional Overview • CAT – EV Opportunities
CenterPoint Energy: An Electric and Natural Gas Utility Electric Utility: • Electric transmission and distribution operations with ~2.4 million metered customers across ~5,000 square miles in and around Houston, Texas • Electric generation, transmission, and distribution to ~145,000 metered customers in southwestern Indiana Gas Utility: • Regulated gas distribution jurisdictions in eight states with 4.5 million customers • 2nd largest U.S. gas distribution company by customer base Non Rate-Regulated: • Provides competitive energy services to meet the needs of more than 100,000 customers in 32 states • Energy Services division provides performance contracting and sustainable infrastructure, such as renewables, distributed generation, and combined heat and power projects
Why do Texas Utilities offer EE programs? EE as a resource: PUCT Subst. Rule 25.181 Program portfolio: SOP vs. Market Transformation PUCT EEIP List Serve
Technical Reference Manual • Eligible Deemed Measures: TEXASEFFICIENCY.COM
Technical Reference Manual • General Guidelines: • All proposed equipment above 2015 IECC • School buildings are broken into several sub-categories • Lighting: • >10% non-operational before install reduces savings • Controls yield + savings when integrated instead of singular control • ACTIVE DLC listing TEXASEFFICIENCY.COM
Technical Reference Manual • HVAC • Replacing units before failure yields higher savings • Savings based on age of unit • RoB uses 2015 IECC • Retrofit size must be between 80-120% of existing tonnage • KW definition is weighting average of specific zone, NOT what your ratchet is based on • kWh is based on coincident factors and is normalized for weather
TRM – What’s New • Lighting • Stadium Lighting • Timeclock feature for outdoor • Rounding for Wattage • “Other” Building category • New Construction – 10% non-qualifying LED removed • HVAC • Pump and Cooling Tower VFDs • ENERGY STAR Roofs • Savings changed from square footage to building type/climate zone
TRM – What’s New • Food Service • Door Gaskets for Walk-In Coolers & Freezers • Demand Controlled Ventilation • ENERGY STAR Ice Makers • Connected Thermostats • DHW Controls – controls for recirc pumps • High Volume Low Speed Fans • PC Power Management
Survey Results • 84% of you were extremely satisfied • Database Access • Clear communication
Thank you! Drew Scatizzi, CenterPoint Energy (713) 207-5618 Andrew.Scatizzi@centerpointenergy.com Visit our website for other program resources www.centerpointefficiency.com
Houston Region Overview Houston Region • 7 million population – 2nd fastest growing major U.S. metro • 5th largest U.S. metro – larger than the State of Missouri • 2.3 million in City of Houston – 4th largest U.S. city • 3.2 million jobs – over 500,000 new jobs created in the past decade • Average age is 34.4 – lowest of any major U.S. metro Global Access • #1 U.S. Port by foreign tonnage • 182 non-stop domestic and international flights • 39 countries with direct service from Houston • 90 foreign consulate offices in Houston • 1 in 4 Houstonians is Foreign Born • 145 languages spoken Houston Economy • Energy Capital of the World – 4,600 energy related companies • 21 Fortune 500 Headquarters – 4th in the U.S. • Top Manufacturing City – 2nd in U.S. for manufacturing GDP • Texas Medical Center – 10 million patient visits per year • NASA Johnson Space Center – over 10,000 aerospace employees • Houston would be the 26th largest economy in the World
Economic Development – Vision, Mission & Goals - Direct New Jobs - Capital Investment - Regional Economic Impact - BRE/Customer Engagement - EDO Leadership Roles - Marketing/Lead Generation - CNP Collaboration CENTERPOINT ENERGY : PAGE
Economic Development - Implementation Impacting Economic Development Allies in Greater Houston 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. CENTERPOINT ENERGY : PAGE
Professional Recognition • Recognized as an Accredited Economic Development Organization (AEDO) • Received reaccreditation in 2018 • One of only two utility companies in the nation to receive the AEDO certification CENTERPOINT ENERGY : PAGE
CNP Regional Team CENTERPOINT ENERGY : PAGE
Regional Partnerships Assignments to each organization to capitalize on the growth in these areas: CENTERPOINT ENERGY : PAGE
Target Industries • Provide industry insight when assisting EDO’s as a member of their response teams. CENTERPOINT ENERGY : PAGE
Historical Impact 2015 - 2018 CENTERPOINT ENERGY : PAGE
2018 Landed Projects CENTERPOINT ENERGY : PAGE
YTD Activity - 2019 CENTERPOINT ENERGY : PAGE
State of Electric TransportationEVs are selling – up to 22% (as of March 2019)
EV Registrations by OEMGreater Houston Area • Tesla is the dominant OEM with 1,950 EVs in 2018 and 1,487 EVs through June 2019 • BMW and Chevy averaging 151 and 123 EVs per year, respectively
Battery electric School Bus • 3 Original Equipment Manufacturers • Thomas Built (Daimler/Proterra) • Lion • Blue Bird • All Electric Range – 65 to 155 miles depending on battery size • Standardized Charging Equipment (J1772) – enables charging of light-duty and bus fleet with the same equipment • Charge Time for Electric School Bus • Level 2 at 19.2 kW 13 to 15 miles per hour • DC Fast Charge @ 60kW 40 to 45 miles per hour
Day in the Life of a BEV School Bus School Bus Day Operation with Overnight Charging & Mid-day Recharge Bus Barn Bus Barn Bus Barn 35-50 miles 35-50 miles 2-4 hrs 8-10 hrs Example: School bus operates morning route with a return to Bus Barn for charging. After period of charging, school bus operates afternoon route with return to Bus Barn. After afternoon route, school bus is charged over night. Courtesy: Daimler AG
Available grants • Texas Volkswagen Environmental Mitigation Program • 80% of the cost of a replacement bus and 50% of the charging station • DERA School Bus Rebate Program / (EPA) • Rebate is $15,000 – $20,000 depending on GVWR • Expected for release in October 2019 with a deadline 30-60 days after the release. Applicants will be selected in a lottery. • DERA Clean Diesel National Grant / (EPA) • Maximum award is $2.5 million per applicant. The grant will fund 45% of the cost of each electric powered bus and charging station • Expected for release in December 2019 with a deadline 60 – 90 days after the release. • Texas Clean Fleet Program (TCFP) /(TCEQ) • 80% of the incremental cost for the new vehicle. • The FY 2019 application period recently closed; future funding is expected
Questions David Owen david.owen@centerpointenergy.com 713-207-6385