1 / 50

Energy Efficiency Lessons and Plans from California Delhi & Mumbai March 2009

Energy Efficiency Lessons and Plans from California Delhi & Mumbai March 2009. Arthur H. Rosenfeld, Commissioner California Energy Commission (916) 654-4930 ARosenfe@Energy.State.CA.US http://www.energy.ca.gov/commissioners/rosenfeld.html or just Google “ Art Rosenfeld”.

selene
Download Presentation

Energy Efficiency Lessons and Plans from California Delhi & Mumbai March 2009

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 Efficiency Lessons and Plans from California Delhi & Mumbai March 2009 Arthur H. Rosenfeld, Commissioner California Energy Commission (916) 654-4930 ARosenfe@Energy.State.CA.US http://www.energy.ca.gov/commissioners/rosenfeld.html or just Google “Art Rosenfeld”

  2. Does Anyone See A Problem With This Picture?

  3. Two Energy Agencies in California The California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) was formed in 1890 to regulate natural monopolies, like railroads, and later electric and gas utilities. The California Energy Commission (CEC) was formed in 1974 to regulate the environmental side of energy production and use. Now the two agencies work very closely, particularly to delay climate change. The Investor-Owned Utilities, under the guidance of the CPUC, spend “Public Goods Charge” money (rate-payer money) to do everything they can that is cost effective to beat existing standards. The Publicly-Owned utilities (20% of the power), under loose supervision by the CEC, do the same. 3

  4. California Energy Commission Responsibilities Both Regulation and R&D • California Building and Appliance Standards • Started 1977 • Updated every few years • Siting Thermal Power Plants Larger than 50 MW • Forecasting Supply and Demand (electricity and fuels) • Research and Development • ~ $80 million per year • CPUC & CEC are collaborating to introduce communicating electric meters and thermostats that are programmable to respond to time-dependent electric tariffs.

  5. California’s Energy Action Plan • California’s Energy Agencies first adopted an Energy Action Plan in 2003. Central to this is the State’s preferred “Loading Order” for resource expansion. • 1. Energy efficiency and Demand Response • 2. Renewable Generation, • 3. Increased development of affordable & reliable conventional generation • 4. Transmission expansion to support all of California’s energy goals. • The Energy Action Plan has been updated since 2003 and provides overall policy direction to the various state agencies involved with the energy sectors

  6. Impact of Standards on Efficiency of 3 Appliances 110 = Effective Dates of 100 National Standards Effective Dates of = State Standards 90 Gas Furnaces 80 75% 70 60% Index (1972 = 100) 60 Central A/C 50 SEER = 13 40 Refrigerators 30 25% 20 1972 1974 1976 1978 1980 1982 1984 1986 1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 Year Source: S. Nadel, ACEEE, in ECEEE 2003 Summer Study, www.eceee.org

  7. New United States Refrigerator Use v. Time and Retail Prices 2,000 25 1,800 1,600 20 1,400 $ 1,270 Refrigerator 1,200 15 Size (cubic ft) Refrigerator volume (cubic feet) Average Annual Energy Use(kwh) or Price($) 1,000 800 10 600 Energy Use per Refrigerator (kWh/Year) 400 5 Refrigerator Price $ 462 in 1983 $ 200 0 0 1947 1952 1957 1962 1967 1972 1977 1982 1987 1992 1997 2002 ~ 100 gallons Gasoline/year ~ 1 Ton CO2/year Source: David Goldstein

  8. In the United States = 80 power plants of 500 MW each

  9. In the United States

  10. Comparison of 3 Gorges to Refrigerator and AC Efficiency Improvements TWh Wholesale (3 Gorges) at 3.6 c/kWh Retail (AC + Ref) at 7.2 c/kWh Value of TWh 三峡电量与电冰箱、空调能效对比 120 7.5 100 If Energy Star Air Conditioners 空调 80 6.0 2005 Stds Air Conditioners 空调 TWH/Year Value (billion $/year) 2000 Stds 60 4.5 If Energy Star 3.0 40 Savings calculated 10 years after standard takes effect. Calculations provided by David Fridley, LBNL 2005 Stds Refrigerators 冰箱 20 1.5 2000 Stds 0 3 Gorges 三峡 Refrigerators 冰箱 3 Gorges 三峡 标准生效后,10年节约电量

  11. California IOU’s Investment in Energy Efficiency Forecast Crisis Performance Incentives Profits decoupled from sales IRP Market Restructuring 2% of 2004 IOU Electric Revenues Public Goods Charges

  12. White Roofs

  13. Temperature Rise of Various Materials in Sunlight 50 40 30 20 10 0 Galvanized Steel Black Paint IR-Refl. Black White Cement Coat. Temperature Rise (°C) Al Roof Coat. Green Asphalt Shingle Red Clay Tile White Asphalt Shingle White Paint Lt. Green Paint Optical White Lt. Red Pain 0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 Solar Absorbance

  14. White is ‘cool’ in Bermuda 19

  15. and in Santorini, Greece 20

  16. and in Hyderabad, India

  17. Cool Roof Technologies New Old flat, white pitched, cool & colored pitched, white 22

  18. Cool Colors Reflect Invisible Near-Infrared Sunlight 23

  19. White Roofs • In California and a growing number of US states, white roofs are required for new buildings, and re-roofing to reduce air conditioning load and “smog”(O3). • But a new concept is that white roofs also cool the world directly.

  20. Effect of Solar Reflective Roofs and Pavements in Cooling the Globe (Source: Akbari, Menon, Rosenfeld. Climatic Change, 2008) ** * * White Roof will be “diluted” by cool colored roofs of lower reflectivity, and roofs that can not be changed, because they are long-lived tile, or perhaps they are already white. Compare 10 tons with a family car, which emits ~4 tons/year. **

  21. CO2 Equivalency of Cool RoofsWorld-wide (Tropics+Temperate) • Cool Roofs alone offset 24 Gt CO2 • Worth > €600 Billion • To Convert 24 Gt CO2 one time into a rate • Assume 20 Year Program, thus 1.2 Gt CO2/year • Average World Car Emits 4 tCO2/year, equivalent to 300 Million Cars off the Road for 20 years. 26

  22. Akbari et al. Main Finding 100 m2 of a white roof, replacing a dark roof, offset the emission of 10 tons of CO2

  23. To be published in Climatic Change 2008. • Global Cooling: Increasing World-wide Urban Albedos to Offset CO2 July 28, 2008 Hashem Akbari and Surabi Menon Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, USA H_Akbari@lbl.gov Tel: 510-486-4287 Arthur Rosenfeld California Energy Commission, USA Arosenfe@energy.state.ca.us Tel: 916-654 4930 • A First Step In Geo-Engineering Which Saves Money and Has Known Positive Environmental Impacts

  24. Conservation Supply Curves and Carbon Abatement Curves

  25. PG&E Electric Supply CurveSummary of Previous Slide • 200 Projects costing at or below 12 cents /kWh average retail price • Total Potential Savings of 18,000 GWh for these projects • This represents about 20% of total electric sales for PG&E in 2008

  26. Reducing U.S. Greenhouse Gas Emissions: How Much at What Cost? US Greenhouse Gas Abatement Mapping Initiative December 12, 2007

  27. U.S. mid-range abatement curve – 2030 Abatement cost <$50/ton Residential buildings – HVAC equipment efficiency Commercial buildings – HVAC equipment efficiency Cost Real 2005 dollars per ton CO2e Afforestation of cropland Coal power plants– CCS rebuilds with EOR 90 Industrial process improve-ments Residential buildings – Shell retrofits Coal mining – Methane mgmt Solar CSP Fuel economy packages – Light trucks Active forest management Distributed solar PV 60 Residential electronics Commercial buildings – Combined heat and power Commercial buildings – Control systems Nuclear new-build Residential water heaters 30 Residential buildings – Lighting 0 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8 2.0 2.2 2.4 2.6 2.8 3.0 3.2 Potential Gigatons/year Onshore wind – Low penetration Industry – CCS new builds on carbon-intensive processes -30 Onshore wind – High penetration Industry – Combined heat and power Biomass power – Cofiring -60 Cellulosic biofuels Manufacturing – HFCs mgmt Car hybridi-zation Existing power plant conversion efficiency improvements Coal power plants – CCS new builds with EOR -90 Residential buildings – New shell improvements Onshore wind – Medium penetration Coal-to-gas shift – dispatch of existing plants Commercial electronics Conservation tillage Winter cover crops -120 Commercial buildings – CFL lighting Coal power plants – CCS rebuilds Reforestation -230 -220 Commercial buildings – LED lighting Commercial buildings – New shell improvements Afforestation of pastureland Coal power plants – CCS new builds Natural gas and petroleum systems management Fuel economy packages – Cars Source: McKinsey analysis

  28. 8% 17% 25% 33% 42% 50% 58% 37

  29. Source: Pat McAuliffe, pmcaulif@energy.state.ca.us

  30. Source: Pat McAuliffe, pmcaulif@energy.state.ca.us

  31. Backup Slides on Cool Colored Roofs, Pavements and Cars

  32. Solar Reflective Surfaces Also Cool the Globe Source: IPCC 41

  33. Methodology: Energy and Air-Quality Analysis 42

  34. CourtesyBASF Coatings Cool and Standard BrownMetal Roofing Panels • Solar reflectance ~ 0.2 higher • Afternoon surface temperature ~ 10ºC lower 43

  35. cool concrete tile R ≥0.40 CourtesyAmericanRooftileCoatings standard concrete tile (same color) +0.37 +0.26 +0.23 +0.15 +0.29 +0.29 solar reflectance gain = cool clay tile R ≥0.40 CourtesyMCA Clay Tile cool metal R ≥0.30 CourtesyBASF IndustrialCoatings cool fiberglass asphalt shingleR ≥0.25 CourtesyElk Corporation Designing Cool Colored Roofing 44

  36. Cool is Cool: From Cool Color Roofs to Cool Color Cars and Cool Jackets • Toyota experiment (surface temperature 10K cooler) • Ford is also working on the technology Courtesy: BMW (http://www.ips-innovations.com/solar_reflective_clothing.htm) 45

  37. Cool Paving Materials: 46

  38. Reflective Pavements are Cooler • Fresh asphalt Albedo: 0.05 Temperature: 123°F • Aged asphalt Albedo: 0.15 Temperature: 115°F • Prototype asphalt coating Albedo: 0.51 Temperature: 88°F 47

  39. Temperature Effect on Rutting 20 16 12 8 4 0 50°C (122°F) failure criterion Rut Depth (mm) 40°C (104°F) 507RF: 50°C 512RF: 40°C 120 80 40 160 0 Repetitions (thousands) Source: Dr. John Harvey, UC B Civil Engineering, Inst. Transpo. Studies 48

  40. Simulated Meteorology and Air-quality Impacts in LA 49

  41. Potential Savings in LA • Savings for Los Angeles • Direct, $100M/year • Indirect, $70M/year • Smog, $360M/year • Estimate of national savings: $5B/year 50

More Related