Benchmarking – It’s A Start

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Posted on 27th February 2012 by Richard Jones in Energy Management

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BenchmarkingOne of the most widely used axioms in modern business management is “you can’t manage what you don’t measure”.   Proper measurement of a building’s current energy performance is a fundamental of energy management.  Sometimes this measurement is done through the provision of an energy “audit” by a qualified engineering firm.  Many public energy efficiency agencies insist on an energy audit prior to providing any financial support for subsequent energy efficiency improvements.  Unfortunately, there are a lot of commercial and industrial buildings that have never gone through an energy audit.

In the absence of doing a full energy audit, another approach is to at least benchmark the energy performance of a commercial or industrial building through an analysis of its energy bills.  Even this simple undertaking has not been widely done, and is just starting to become a trend among larger North American cities.  The following article provides a good overview of the situation in the United States.

NY vs. DC: Who Wins in Building Energy Benchmarking?

As this article highlights, most of the benchmarking being done is a simple snapshot of utility bills compared against the square footage of the building.  This provides a starting point…but it is not enough.

The future?  I feel it is going to be real-time measurement of energy usage in a building as part of an energy audit.  This “dynamic benchmarking” provides an objective and accurate measurement of energy usage prior to any retrofit work and then a verification of actual savings following the energy retrofit.

 

 

 

The Energy Internet and Energy Efficiency

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Posted on 20th February 2012 by Richard Jones in Energy Management

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Last November I was privileged to attend the CIPEC Energy 2011 conference in Toronto.  One of the keynote speakers was Tom Rand, Founder and Director of VCi Green Funds, Lead Cleantech Advisor at the MaRS Discovery District in Toronto.  I found Tom’s keynote speech to be  one of the most enlightened and practical summaries of the role of energy efficiency in helping address our global carbon challenge.

I would highly recommend reading this summary of Tom’s comments at the Energy 2011 conference.  Please see this link.

Here are a few of the key takeaways I got from Tom’s keynote speech:

  • Think of clean energy as a tree with various fruits that are harder and easier to reach.
  • Energy efficiency and peak demand reduction are the two lowest hanging, easy-to-reach fruit.  We shouldn’t need policy incentives to do this – CEO’s should be doing them now because they have ROI’s that are attractive.
  • Need to unlock energy efficiency and demand management NOW if we ever expect to get to the more difficult systems such as shutting coal plants, etc.
  • First step:  Efficiency – more GDP, less energy
  • Second step:  Clean energy – more energy, less carbon
  • BUT – we need to focus on the easy things first:  energy efficiency.

More from the Energy 2011 in future posts.

Upcoming Article: Benchmarking – It’s A Start