1 / 26

Fostering New Off-Grid Solutions for Clean Air

Founded in 1886, NJ Clean Air Council promotes off-grid solutions to achieve a 7% reduction in CO2 emissions by 2010. With a focus on energy efficiency, renewable energy, and carbon sequestration, we fund and support projects that contribute to a climate-friendly energy policy.

kbeamer
Download Presentation

Fostering New Off-Grid Solutions for Clean Air

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Fostering New Off-Grid SolutionsNJ Clean Air CouncilApril 1, 2009

  2. Founded in New Brunswick, NJ in 1886 • 250 operating companies • Approximately 120,000 employees • 14,900 employees and retirees in NJ • Operations in 57 countries • 3 Divisions: Consumer, Pharmaceuticals, Medical Devices

  3. Climate Friendly Energy Policy1999/2003 Achieve a 7% absolute reduction in Green House Gas (CO2) emissions by 2010, compared to a base year of 1990

  4. CO2 Reduction Pathway: A Balanced Approach • Energy Efficiency • On-site Cogeneration • On-Site Renewables: Solar, Wind, LFG, Biomass, Geothermal • Green Power Purchases • Carbon Offsets & Sequestration

  5. CO2 Capital Funding Process August, 2004 • $40 million per year in capital relief for projects worldwide • Projects provide good financial returns: 10-15% Internal Rate of Return • Projects provide meaningful CO2 reduction

  6. CO2 Reduction Projects since 2005 • 63 projects approved for funding • $128.3 million US • 120,000 metric tons CO2/yr • Average IRR: 17.3% • 45 Projects Complete

  7. EfficiencyEnergy Best PracticesRev. 2007 • Stage 1: Management Practices & Continuous Improvement • Stage 2: Energy Purchasing & Monitoring • Stage 3: Air Handling (HVAC) • Stage 4: Motors & Pumps • Stage 5: Boiler Systems • Stage 6: Chiller Systems • Stage 7: Electrical & On-site Generation • Stage 8: Lighting • Stage 9: Compressed Air • Stage 10: Manufacturing & Other Load Reductions

  8. Geothermal Projects DePuy - St. Priest, FranceGeothermal Heating / Cooling System • Ground water heat pump • Provides all heating & most cooling for 7,000 s.m. HQ building Vistakon – Limerick, IrelandGeothermal Cooling System • Utilizes underground water flow

  9. Biomass Projects Cilag, Schaffhausen, Switzerland Wood Chip Boiler ALZA, Mountain View, CA Landfill Gas Generation Installation of 3 MW of electrical power Waste heat recovery • 350 kW boiler provides heating for distribution center Centocor, Cork, Ireland Biomass Boiler • 2.1 MW boiler provides process & HVAC steam

  10. J&J China, Shanghai Domestic Hot Water Solar Thermal Projects McNeil ConsumerFt. Washington, PA124 kW Thermal System for Boiler Pre-heat

  11. Cogeneration Projects Ortho Clinical Diagnostics – Raritan, NJGas Turbine, 2007 • 1.6 MW – Kawasaki Gas Fired Turbine • Heat recovery, steam generation Ortho-McNeil Pharmaceuticals Raritan, NJ Reciprocating Engine, 2009 • 3.5 MW – Jenbacher Engine • Heat recovery, hot water

  12. Hyatt Hotel – New Brunswick – March 2009 Currently have three new solar projects in development at NJ locations.

  13. Commitment to Sustainable DesignAll new construction to be LEED certified

  14. RC-1 Laboratory, Springhouse Campus, PA J&J PRD Lab Goes for LEED GOLD Designed to operate using 45 % less energy than ASHRAE 90.1- 2004

  15. NJ Track Record of Leadership • NJ BPU Clean Energy Program • Renewable Portfolio Standard • NJ Global Warming Response Act • RGGI • NJ Energy Master Plan • LEV Program • NEEP Energy Efficiency Strategy for NJ • Draft Global Warming Response Act Recommendation Report

  16. Moving Forward… • Execute on plans, with emphasis in the short term on efficiency, equipment standards (CFL’s, appliances, etc) and building codes. • Continue to support distributed generation by industry: cogeneration, biomass, solar. • Industry’s role – Run businesses efficiently and implement distributed generation projects where it makes sense. • Utilities’ role – Deliver low-carbon power. Execute CHP, solar, wind, biomass on a scale that is cost effective. Utilities must be rewarded for selling less. • The net impact on GHG emissions should be a critical consideration for all State decisions.

  17. Moving forward… • Support national climate change legislation to set targets and timetables based on science (IPCC) and establish an economy-wide cap & trade system (allow RGGI to become part of a national system). See USCAP Blueprint for Legislative Action at www.us-cap.org • A national cap & trade system will establish a market-based price for carbon that will drive innovation and investment to meet environmental goals at the lowest cost.

  18. Dennis Canavan dcanava2@its.jnj.com 732-524-6269 THANK YOU !

More Related