1 / 12

ENERGY SAVING Product Offering

ENERGY SAVING Product Offering. Compressor Marketing OPPORTUNITIES. CURRENT CONDITIONS. Facility owner/managers are faced with reducing their operating costs. There are many different directions they can choose and making the best business decision can be a challenge as:.

noel
Download Presentation

ENERGY SAVING Product Offering

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. ENERGY SAVING Product Offering Compressor Marketing OPPORTUNITIES

  2. CURRENT CONDITIONS Facility owner/managers are faced with reducing their operating costs. There are many different directions they can choose and making the best business decision can be a challenge as: • Equipment ages- efficiency decrease • Utility cost increase • Repair costs increase • Operating budgets change • Refrigerant availability /cost changes due to phase out • Comfort issues

  3. CHOICES Option 1 • Replace the entire system with new equipment • Pros: • New equipment can reduce repair costs • New equipment will contain new environmentally friendly refrigerant • New equipment can be more efficient • Comfort issues can improve

  4. CHOICES Option 1 Cons: $ • Capital funds availability • System down time

  5. CHOICES Option 2 Life Extension Project • Survey the building and existing equipment condition • Identify key pieces of equipment that have reached the end of it’s service life like: • Compressors • Motors • Contactors • Controllers • Dampers • Economizer controls • Wear items • Heat exchangers • Pumps • Piping

  6. CHOICES Option 2 • Make needed repairs • Replace wear items • Clean existing system components • Re-commission the system

  7. ADVANTAGES Option 2 • Allows the ability to select components that will reduce energy use • Upgrade the system vs. replacing the entire system • Less cost than replacing

  8. OPPORTUNITIES Option 2 Utilize the local utility company to assist in funding the project by: • Performing a quick analysis of the building's mechanical system • Obtain the past 12 months (or more) of utility bills • Qualify the opportunity by using the data collected • Contacting an energy engineer approved by the utility company • Determine the energy savings • Calculate the utility’s possible rebate

  9. EQUIPMENT SELECTION COMPRESSORS • Fixed-speed compressors found in traditional HVAC systems operate at two states, off or 100% on. This wastes energy during part load conditions which is where most systems operate 99% of the time. • This includes 1, 2 or 3 stage compressors that cannot compare to the full range variable capacity of a VFD rotary screw chiller today. • Most chillers installed 20 years ago were rated near 1.3 kW/ton performance which is a 8 EER. This was the standard for the chillers at that time. • MCS developed a system realizing reductions in Kw/ton down to 0.4 at part load conditions. • That equates to 30 EER. This could bring your energy savings up to 26%.  

  10. SOLUTION • The MCS Energy Performance System reacts quickly to capacity changes and ramp up faster than fixed speed compressor systems • Also eliminates the high demand created in across the line or even part start motors. • This performance based technology coupled with energy efficient software using electronic expansion valves can change a failing inefficient system nightmare into a cost saving solution without the huge capital investment of replacing the entire system. • The best part of this equation is not only will the MCS Energy Performance System reduce operating costs, going directly to the customer’s bottom line but the local utility will help pay for the installation with incentives. This permits a quicker return on investment.

  11. FIRST STEP Identify locations with equipment approaching the end of it’s service life • Perform a quick analysis of the building's mechanical system • Obtain the past 12 months (or more) of utility bills • Qualify the opportunity by using the data collected • Contact an energy engineer approved by the utility company • Determine the energy savings • Calculate the utility’s possible rebate • Sell to the customer using the ROI based on the energy savings

  12. 5580 Enterprise Parkway, Fort Myers, Florida USA 33905Phone: 239-694-0089   Fax: 239-694-0031 www.mcscontrols.com

More Related