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Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation to 406 Class
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Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

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Page 1: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

Energy Efficiency ProgramsAugust 23, 2010

Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEMEric Soderberg, PE, CEM

Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PEKevin Martin, MBA

Presentation to 406 Class

Page 2: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

[email protected]

Herbert M. Eckerlin, PhD, PEProfessor, DirectorPhone: 919.515.5227E-mail: [email protected]

Kevin Martin, MBAStrategic Energy ManagerPhone: 919.515.0903Cell: 919.996.9978E-mail: [email protected]

John D. Rees, PE, CEMEnergy Extension SpecialistPhone: 919.515.9436E-mail: [email protected]

Eric W. Soderberg, PE, CEMEnergy Extension SpecialistPhone: 919.795.1114E-mail: [email protected]

Stephen D. Terry, PhD, PEExtension Assistant ProfessorPhone: 919.515.1878E-mail: [email protected]

Energy Program Technical Staff

Page 3: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

MAE Energy ProgramsAssessment ProcessEnergy Systems AnalyzedSurvey Procedures and ResultsComments and Questions

Page 4: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

Industrial Assessment Center

(IAC)

Energy Management Program

(EMP)

Page 5: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

Funded Federally by

US Department of Energy (DOE)

Serving Manufacturers Energy bills typically from

$100k to $3 million Will serve larger as well

Service Territory North Carolina Southern Virginia Northern South Carolina

Page 6: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

Funded by

NC State Appropriation

Reports to

NC Energy Office

Businesses Served Manufacturers Commercial Governmental Institutional

No size restrictions

Service Territory State of North Carolina

Page 7: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

Save Energy

Reduce Waste

Improve Productivity

Train next generation of “Energy Engineers”

Energy Program Objectives

Page 8: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.
Page 9: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.
Page 10: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

;

Preliminary Information & Consultation Onsite Preliminary Energy Diagnostic Survey (PEDS) Identification of areas for Potential Savings

Targeted System Survey Survey of Existing Equipment Measurement & Data Gathering Interview O&M personnel Identification of opportunities Savings and Cost Analysis Report Client Review of Report

Page 11: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

;

Data Analysis & Reporting ROI, simple payback, life cycle costing Cost to benefit analysis, NPV, IRR Full report delivered

Implementation Follow-up & Additional Assistance Follow-up calls and assistance Continued assistance as needed

Page 12: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

The purpose of a Preliminary Energy Diagnostics Survey (PEDS) is to evaluate plant operations from an energy perspective, to identify and prioritize energy saving opportunities, and to recommend targeted energy surveys for equipment that offer the greatest potential for energy savings.

Purpose of aPreliminary Energy Diagnostics Survey

Page 13: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

Boilers Lighting Compressed Air HVAC Systems Chillers and Cooling Towers Motors & Pumps Preventative Maintenance Steam Systems & Steam Traps Process energy systems

Systems targeted during aPreliminary Energy Diagnostics Survey

Page 14: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

Air Compressors and Air DryersThere are 3 air compressors. There is one

common air dryer.Compressors: Manufacturer: Ingersoll-Rand Model: SSRXFE200-25 Serial: FF1274U97151 Type: Rotary screw Horsepower: 200 hp Rating: 1,100 cfm Operation: 116 – 125 psig

Page 15: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

ChillersThere is one water cooled chiller:

Manufacturer: Carrier Model: 30HXC106R--661KA Serial: 2307Q07525 Service: Cooling water for molds Operation: Setpoint is 48° F

Page 16: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

Monthy Electrical Energy Consumption and Cost

0

100,000

200,000

300,000

400,000

500,000

600,000

700,000

800,000

900,000

1,000,000

1,100,000

1,200,000

Feb09

Mar09

Apr09

May09

Jun09

Jul09

Aug09

Sept09

Oct09

Nov09

Dec09

Jan10

Ele

ctr

ica

l E

ne

rgy

Us

ag

e,

kW

h

0

7,500

15,000

22,500

30,000

37,500

45,000

52,500

60,000

67,500

75,000

82,500

90,000

Ele

ctr

ica

l C

os

t, $

$

Total kWh

Total Electrical Cost

Electrical Use and Cost for an Industrial Facility – Data collected for a Preliminary Energy Study

Page 17: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

Water Consumption and Cost

Consumption Water Costs Sewer Costs Total

Billing Month

Cubic Feet

GallonsCost of

first 50 ccf

Cost of ccf >50

Water Min

Charge

Total Water

Charges

Sewer Usage Cost

Sewer Min

Charge

Total Sewer

Charges

Water + Sewer

Charges

Jan 08 23,178 173,395 $169 $549 $24 $741 $1,014 $33 $1,046 $1,787

Feb 08 17,211 128,755 $169 $369 $24 $561 $753 $33 $785 $1,346

Mar 08 22,348 167,185 $169 $524 $24 $716 $978 $33 $1,010 $1,726

Apr 08 18,597 139,124 $169 $411 $24 $603 $813 $33 $846 $1,449

May 08 18,933 141,638 $169 $421 $24 $613 $828 $33 $861 $1,474

Jun 08 30,898 231,148 $169 $782 $24 $974 $1,351 $33 $1,384 $2,358

Jul 08 30,839 230,707 $169 $780 $24 $972 $1,349 $33 $1,382 $2,354

Aug 08 36,754 274,957 $169 $959 $24 $1,151 $1,608 $33 $1,640 $2,791

Sept 08 23,124 172,991 $169 $547 $24 $739 $1,011 $33 $1,044 $1,783

Oct 08 16,273 121,738 $169 $340 $24 $532 $712 $33 $744 $1,277

Nov 08 12,570 94,036 $169 $229 $24 $421 $550 $33 $582 $1,003

Dec 08 12,644 94,590 $169 $231 $24 $423 $553 $33 $586 $1,009

Totals 263,369 1,970,263 $2,022 $6,142 $283 $8,446 $11,520 $392 $11,912 $20,358

Monthly Averages 164,189 $169 $512 $24 $704 $960 $33 $993 $1,696

Water & Sewer Use and Cost for an Industrial Facility Data collected for a Preliminary Energy Study

Page 18: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

Monthy Water & Sewer Consumption & Cost

0

25,000

50,000

75,000

100,000

125,000

150,000

175,000

200,000

225,000

250,000

275,000

300,000

Jan08

Feb08

Mar08

Apr08

May08

Jun08

Jul08

Aug08

Sept08

Oct08

Nov08

Dec08

Wate

r U

se, G

allo

ns

0

250

500

750

1,000

1,250

1,500

1,750

2,000

2,250

2,500

2,750

3,000

Wate

r &

Sew

er

Co

st,

$$

Water UseTotal Charges

Page 19: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

Summary of Recommendations:The NCSU Energy Management Program (EMP)

recommends the following: Compressed Air Study Convert T12 task lighting to T8. Explore the

possibility of replacing the 8 ft. T12 fixtures with single fixtures containing two 4 ft. T8 lamps.

Consider a Chiller and Cooling Tower Study. Consider a Motor Study

Page 20: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.
Page 21: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

Typical Existing Lighting – T12 Fluorescent

Page 22: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

Typical Lighting in an Industrial Facility – 400 Watt Metal Halide

Page 23: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

Fixture quantities by type Fixture Wattage Lighting level in Footcandles Maintenance issues Electrical Rates

Page 24: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

No. RecommendationTotal

Annual Savings

Labor Cost

Material Cost

Instal-lation Cost

Disposal Cost

Total Cost Incl.

Disposal

Simple Payback (Years)

kW Saved

Annual kWh Saved

1T12 to T8 Ballast & Lamp Replacement

$8,964 $10,161 $10,161 $20,321 $2,321 $22,642 2.5 20 98,178

2T8: 32W to 25W and Low Wattage Ballast

Installation$20,197 $27,443 $27,443 $54,886 $7,900 $62,785 3.1 30 221,214

Totals $29,160 $37,604 $37,604 $75,207 $10,221 $85,428 2.9 50 319,392

Table 1. Savings and Payback for Recommendations 1 & 2

Table 2. Savings and Payback with Utility Incentives

No. RecommendationTotal

Annual Savings

Instal-lation Cost

Disposal Cost

Total Cost Incl.

Disposal

Potential Utility

Incentive

Net Cost with

Incentive

Simple Payback

with Incentives

Simple Payback without

Incentives

1T12 to T8 Ballast & Lamp Replacement

$8,964 $20,321 $2,321 $22,642 $5,922 $16,720 1.9 2.5

2T8: 32W to 25W and Low Wattage Ballast

Installation$20,197 $54,886 $7,900 $62,785 $14,472 $48,313 2.4 3.1

Totals $29,160 $75,207 $10,221 $85,428 $20,394 $65,034 2.2 2.9

Savings and Cost Summary from a Lighting Report

Page 25: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.
Page 26: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.
Page 27: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.
Page 28: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.
Page 29: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

POTENTIAL ANNUAL ESTIMATED PAYBACK ANNUAL SAVINGS RECOMMENDATION SAVINGS COST (YEARS) KW KWH MMBTU

Lower System Pressure $ 12,063 $ 1,000 0.1 37 150527 493

Drain Timers $ 1,480 $ 3,000 2.0 3 21092 69

Leak Remediation $ 6,429 $ 700 0.1 17 84814 278

Air Turbine Mixers $ 8,435 $ 6,000 0.7 21 114396 377

Double Diaphragm Pumps $ 1,703 $ 0 N/A 4 22589 75

Pneumatic Vibrators $ 1,703 $ 900 0.6 4 22589 75

Blow-off $ 2,627 $ 2,500 1.0 7 35407 119

Flexible Film Print Vacuum $ 3,252 $ 600 0.2 6 48310 159

TOTAL SAVINGS POTENTIAL ANNUAL ESTIMATED OPERATING CORRECTION PAYBACK ANNUAL SAVINGS COST COST (YEARS) KW KWH MMBTU CURRENT $ 191,750 $ N/A N/A 477 2599087 8512 RECOMMENDED $ 129,070 $ 14,700 N/A 322 1761420 5766 REC. SAVINGS $ 62,680 $ 14,700 0.3 155 837668 2746

Page 30: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

Fifteen Day Compressor Load Monitoring

Full Load Current 96 amps 34 amps

Percent of Operating Time 59.5% of total 40.5% of total

Average Horsepower during Periods of Operation 62.3 HP 5.9 HP 56.5 HP

Observed Peak Horsepower during Operation 88.9 HP 24.2 HP 64.7 HP

Annual Cost to operate 24 Hours/Day $30,558 /year $2,872 /year $27,686 /year

Monthly Cost for 24 Hour/Day Operation $2,546 /month $239 /month $2,307 /month

75 HPCompressor

25 HPCompressor

Difference

Estimated Energy Savings, Cost Savings, and Payback

RecommendationAnnual Savings

Estimated Cost

Simple Payback

Years

kW Decrease

kWH Savings

Replace 75 HP Compressor with 25 HP Unit

$24,917 $20,000 0.80 38 332,229

Page 31: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

Flue Gas Analysis O2, CO, CO2

Stack EfficiencyOperating/Maintenance Issues Dirty Heat Exchange surfaces Scanner failure Temperature control

Page 32: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.
Page 33: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.
Page 34: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

Hot Water Boiler Survey

Date ________________________ Company _____________________ Location _________________________ 1. What is operating pressure? _________________________________________________ 2. What is leaving water temperature? ___________________________________________ 3. Is water temperature constant or variable? ______________________________________

If it varies, what determines the temperature? ____________________________________ 4. What type of hot water boiler is it?

Cast iron sectional ______________________ Number of Sections _________________ Fire tube ___________ Fin tube water tube _

5. Is stack temperature measured? ______ Is there a hole for stack temperature gauge? _____ 6. Are boiler conditions logged by hand or trended in software? _______ How often? ______

Page 35: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

7. Is return water temperature measured? ________________________________________

Does the boiler operation require a lot of make-up water? _________________________ Is the make-up water measured? _____________________________________________ What is the source of make-up water? _________________________________________ Do you have a chemical water treatment company check the water quality (i.e. dissolved oxygen, hardness, etc.)? ____________________________________________________ Do you have any water side problems in the hot water boiler? Is the hot water a circulating system? _________________________________________________________________

8. Do you have the boiler tuned regularly? _________ If so, how often? ________________ Do you have the boilers cleaned regularly? ________ How often? ___________________

9. Do you have oil atomization? ________________________________________________ 10. How many oil storage tanks do you have? _________ What size? ____________________

Are they dedicated to a particular boiler? __________ Above or below ground? _________

11. Do you have fuel oil additives? ________ What type? _____________________________

For what purpose? _________________________________________________________ How much & at what intervals? _______________________________________________

12. From an operational point of view, what are the boiler’s operating states: High/Off,

Off/Low/High, modulating? ________________________________________________

13. What are your most serious problems?

Page 36: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

Manufacturer Fuel

Model No. Serial No.

Type of Draft Date Manufactured

Firing Rate Low Mid High

Flue Gas Analysis

O2 %

CO2 %

CO ppm

NOx ppm

Temperatures

Ambient Air °F

Stack °F

Stack Efficiency %

Excess Air %

Water °F Water/Steam Pressure

Boiler Gas Rating MBh Boiler Oil Rating MBh

Burner Manufacturer Burner Model / Serial

Burner Ratings

Operating hrs/year

Page 37: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

Facility/ Boiler

Boiler Mfgr/ Model

Size Fuel Year Firing Rate

Stack Temp

O2 in Flue Gas

Sta

ck L

oss

Eff

icie

ncy

CO in

Flue Gas, ppm

Low 444 °F 3.8% 81.0% 15 Buckland Elementary No. 1 Boiler

Weil McLain/ BL-1086-

SW

2,520 MBh

No. 2 Fuel Oil

1982 High 584 °F 2.8% 78.0% 11

Low 480 °F 8.8% 75.8% 31 Buckland Elementary No. 2 Boiler

Weil McLain

2,520 MBh

No. 2 Fuel Oil

1982 High 700 °F 2.9% 74.1% 34

Page 38: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

At your next boiler tuneup, discuss the relatively high excess air level on Boiler No. 2 at low fire to determine if the air/fuel ratio can be leaner at low fire.

Boiler No. 1 currently operates more efficiently at low fire than Boiler No. 2 (this may be corrected after burner tune-ups have been performed). Consequently, Boiler No. 1 should be operated when low fire operation is required.

Tune boilers to operate most efficiently at the firing level where they operate most frequently.

Install stack thermometers in the stack to monitor flue gas temeperature.

Use portable flue gas analyzer to measure O2 in flue gas every 6 months (at typical operating loads).

Install gas meters on the individual boilers and track individual boiler fuel usage on a monthly basis.

Consider reducing steam pressure. Lower pressure in 5 psi increments and allow boiler to operate at the reduced level for several days to determine if the system operates acceptably.

Consider installing economizers to heat boiler feedwater.

Page 39: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

HVAC, Chiller, and Cooling Tower Surveys

Systems Encountered:

•Small Commercial•Large Commercial•Small Industrial•Large Industrial

Page 40: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.
Page 41: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.
Page 42: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.
Page 43: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.
Page 44: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.
Page 45: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.
Page 46: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.
Page 47: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

Previously shown Air

Cooled Chiller

viewed from Above

Page 48: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.
Page 49: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

Industrial Air Handling System

Page 50: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

Industrial Water Cooled Chiller

Page 51: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

Industrial Cooling Tower

Page 52: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

Cooling Tower Cell Membrane

Page 53: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

Industrial Heat Exchanger (HEX) & Air Cooled Chiller

Page 54: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

Industrial Heat Exchanger (HEX) & Air Cooled Chiller

Page 55: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

Process in a Forging Plant

Page 56: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

Reverse Osmosis (RO) Water Treatment System

Page 57: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

End Product of a Forging Plant

Page 58: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

End Product of Bottling Plant

Page 59: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

2005 IAC Assessment $250,000 annual savings $560,000 implementation

cost, 2.3 year payback

Recession activity Company grew market

share due to greater efficiency

Company expanded into new world markets as others retracted

Some recommendations applied corporately Additional $920,000

worldwide savings

Local plant expanded New product line added New line and 50 new jobs

without incentive

Page 60: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

Campus Greenhouses Detailed lighting survey

$112k implementation cost $38k leveraged incentives $17k annual energy savings 4.4 year simple payback

▪ Maintenance savings further shorten payback

Boiler tuning▪ Boiler was short cycling

Helping NC Bottom Line Currently working with:

School districts Community Colleges Military facilities Cities Counties Towns

Page 61: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

Saving Energy Comprehensive and targeted surveys Demand Side Management (DSM) Energy bill analysis

Reducing Waste and Pollution Landfill and water issues Carbon footprint calculation

Page 62: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.

Additional Technical Assistance Strategic Energy Planning Assistance with proposals Measurement & Verification

Improving Productivity Process and systems review Additional resources (IES)

Page 63: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.
Page 64: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.
Page 65: Energy Efficiency Programs August 23, 2010 Presented by: John Rees, PE, CEM Eric Soderberg, PE, CEM Dr. Herb Eckerlin, PE Kevin Martin, MBA Presentation.