1 / 19

Renewable Energy Generation

Renewable Energy Generation. Achieve net-zero facilities and GHG reduction goals by:. Geothermal Energy Systems Photovoltaic Systems Biomass Systems Landfill Gas Microturbines. Wind Turbines Solar Water Heaters Concentrated Solar Power Methane Recovery Systems.

licia
Download Presentation

Renewable Energy Generation

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. Renewable Energy Generation Achieve net-zero facilities and GHG reduction goals by: • Geothermal Energy Systems • Photovoltaic Systems • Biomass Systems • Landfill Gas Microturbines • Wind Turbines • Solar Water Heaters • Concentrated Solar Power • Methane Recovery Systems

  2. Renewable Energy –Pain or Gain? Transmission loss is #1 source of energy inefficiency Tremendous opportunities exist for increased energy efficiency when generation and use are well matched Power failures (blackouts, brownouts) create inefficiency and undermine mission Trigeneration and other efficiency/ renewable power solutions can address these and other issues with demonstrable ROI

  3. Innovations in Energy AnalysisUsing a Second Law Approach to Energy SavingsFIRST LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS•Law of energy quantity•Focus on energy conservation•Ignores quality lossesSECOND LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS•Law of energy quality•Focus on energy quality loss as opportunity for energy savings•We use MCDA to account for stakeholder priorities/preferences THE SCIENCE OF DECISION MAKING •Methodical analysis•Supports the development of planning and programming requirements

  4. Net Zero Installation Proposed Definition A net zero installation is one which applies an integrated approach to management of energy, water, and waste to capture and commercialize the resource value and/or enhance the ecological productivity of land, water, and air. Its key attributes are: • A fundamental shift towards cyclical handling of resources, virtually eliminating the concept of waste. • Ecologically derived design method to systematically support resource recovery by synergistically combining outputs and inputs. • Operates through breaking down “stovepipes” of assessment and design decision-making rather than following traditional approaches based on single technical discipline problem solving. • Focus on capturing value, not minimizing initial cost, through effective inter-disciplinary project teams. Net Zero Installation Concept

  5. Integrated Sustainability Themes ECOLOGY REGIONAL AND COMMUNITY SCALE WATER WASTES 3 SOCIETY QUALITY OF LIFE POLICY EDUCATION TRANSPORTATION AGRICULTURE ECONOMICS ENERGY GREENHOUSE GASES MATERIALS Relationship between the 13 Themes INSTALLATION SCALE BUILDING SCALE

  6. District Energy Sharing System Schematic

  7. DISTRICT ENERGY SHARING & WATER RECOVERY • Modern Building Challenge Modern buildings attempt to balance their own heating and cooling demands to reduce the energy required to heat and cool the building.

  8. DISTRICT ENERGY SHARING & WATER RECOVERY • Using the Energy Imbalance • Energy sharing for communities with: • 45% residential • 30% office • 25% retail • Can supply 25% to 34% of the total thermal energy District Energy and Water Sharing balances the heating and cooling demands of an entire community to reduce the energy and water required to meet the needs of the community.

  9. DISTRICT ENERGY SHARING & WATER RECOVERY • Reducing Energy Consumption Heat recovery and alternative high or low grade thermal energy sources are used to store or provide the net energy demand. 50% of peak heating/cooling provides 90% of annual energy 60% of a building's energy consumption is heating & cooling

  10. DISTRICT ENERGY SHARING & WATER RECOVERY • Enabling Alternative Energy Reduction in energy demand maximizes feasibility of other alternative energy sources

  11. Net Zero Hierarchy Net Zero Installation Concept

  12. QUESTIONS?

More Related