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Energy Efficiency Self-Assessments

Energy Efficiency Self-Assessments. Garry Miller Penn State University Pennsylvania Technical Assistance Program March 8, 2008. Pennsylvania Technical Assistance Program Penn State University Outreach. PennTAP Specialists Positioned Around Pennsylvania.

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Energy Efficiency Self-Assessments

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  1. Energy Efficiency Self-Assessments Garry Miller Penn State University Pennsylvania Technical Assistance Program March 8, 2008

  2. Pennsylvania Technical Assistance ProgramPenn State University Outreach

  3. PennTAP Specialists Positioned Around Pennsylvania

  4. Current Energy Related PennTAP Activities • 2-P2E2 Assessors • Energy Assessments • Sectors Served • Industrial • Commercial • Energy Assessment Categories • Walk-Thru Energy Efficiency Survey • Targeted Energy Efficiency Assessment • Comprehensive Energy Efficiency Assessment

  5. Electric power & billing review Lighting Building envelope Space HVAC Motors Fan systems Pumping systems Compressed air systems Boiler & steam systems Process Cooling* Cooling Towers Chillers Process Heating* Alternative/renewable energy source options & energy harvesting Energy Assessment Categories

  6. PennTAP Energy Testing Equipment

  7. Self-Assessment Target Areas • Utility bill documentation & benchmarking • Identify & log energy consumers (ie: lighting fixtures, air compressors, space heaters, motors etc) • Review: • Building envelope • Lighting • HVAC Systems

  8. Energy Self Assessment ObjectiveDetermine current energy consumption levels, identify energy consumers within the operation and establish a benchmark for future energy efficiency improvements.

  9. Energy Self Assessment(cont) Process • Define the scope of the assessment • Inform senior management of plan for self assessment • Collect utility bills from the previous 12 months for each building within the scope of the project • Conduct a walk-thru of each building, listing the energy consumers and record building envelope, lighting & HVAC observations

  10. Energy Self Assessment(cont) Process • Transcribe observations & enter utility bill data into a spreadsheet • Identify “low-hanging-fruit” opportunities • Present results and recommendations to senior management • Solicit assistance to further evaluate targeted opportunities

  11. Building Envelope • Building Envelope Comprised of: • Roof/ceiling assembly • Wall assembly • Floor assembly • Slab edge • Below grade wall • Windows & skylights • Doors • Other components to permit the passage of air, light, vehicles or people • Sometimes referred to as the buildings “shell” or “skin” • Controls the flow of energy between the inside & outside of the building

  12. Examples of Recommendations(cont) Building Envelope • Replace missing insulation • Replace wet insulation • Unblock windows to let in passive solar energy • Replace cracked glass in window • Caulk around plumbing pipe, gas pipe & H2O spigot • Repair broken heat pipe • Weather strip around doors • Consider highly reflective ELMS roofing • Place dampers in outside exhaust • Insulate around roll-up doors • Patch hole to outside in wall

  13. Building EnvelopeBreach

  14. Examples of Recommendations HVAC (up-to 30-35% of energy) • Use set back thermostats • Reduce (or increase) temperature set points • Replace w/energy efficient AC unit • Adjust air vents to equalize tempered air • Use timers & sensors on air fans • Seal leaking ducts • Replace glass in broken window • Reduce HVAC in un-occupied bldg or space • Use operable windows in mild weather • Eliminate space heater & add register • Install ceiling fans to distribute air • Insulate steam pipes • Insulate hot boiler surface

  15. Examples of Recommendations Lighting • Change from T12 to T8 fluorescence lamps & electronic ballasts • Install occupancy sensors in restrooms & lunch areas • Delamp • Replace 40w incandescent w/LED’s in exit lights • Incorporate T5 fluorescence fixture as task lighting Alternate Sources & Harvesting • Use scrap wood for alternate fuel boiler • Consider Geothermal heat pump • Capture vented heat to preheat boiler charge • Consider solar hot water heating • Capture & redirect process for space heat

  16. Lighting • Incandescent lamp is the least energy-efficient light source with a relatively short life. • 70%-90% of the power consumed is lost as heat.

  17. Fluorescent Lighting

  18. LightingT12 to T8 Fluorescent

  19. LightingT12/T8/T5

  20. LightingLED Traffic Lights

  21. Examples of Recommendations Boiler & Steam Systems • Reduce Leaks • Adjust air/fuel ratio • Insulate piping • Reuse boiler hot exhaust gas • Recover condensate Compressed Air Systems • Reduce leaks • Reduce pressure • Eliminate inappropriate use • Use outside air • Recover Heat

  22. Upgrade to High Efficiency Lighting

  23. Energy StarPortfolio Manager • What is it? On-line energy management tool to enable organizations to track & assess energy and water consumption across a portfolio of buildings • Benefits • Enables benchmarking & tracking of energy and water use and costs over time • Enables operators to rate performance vs similar buildings, nationwide • Provides a process for Energy Star building certification

  24. Energy StarPortfolio Manager • Features • Tracking of multiple energy & water meters for each building • Customization of meter designations • Benchmark current performance • Track improvement over time • Monitor energy & water costs • Share information within and outside the organization • Compare cost savings within the building portfolio & between projects • Create a statement of energy performance for each building

  25. Energy Star Rating Eligible Buildings • Offices • Courthouses • K-12 schools • Residence Halls/Dorms • Hotels • Medical offices • Hospitals • Wastewater treatment plants • Grocery Stores • Retail Stores • Warehouses • Bank/financial inst

  26. Contact Information Garry Miller Sr Technology Specialist Pennsylvania Technical Assistance Program Penn State University (570) 722-5854 sgmiller@psu.edu

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