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Environmental Controls
Lecture 5 Electrical Power Management Utility Rate Structures
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Environmental Controls
Electrical Power Management
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“Facts of Life” Utilities are licensed to provide sufficient capacity to maintain expected demands New power plants are expensive to license and construct Nuclear Hydroelectric Natural Gas Oil Coal All pose safety concerns to humans or the environment
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Sources of Electrical Power
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Sources of Electrical Power
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Emerging Technologies/Strategies
Supply Side Management Wind Photovoltaics Tidal Biomass: “Waste to Energy” Demand Side Management Conservation vs New Construction Design Practice Initiatives Design Certifications Stewardship of the Built Environment
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Supply Side Management
Wind
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Supply Side Management
Photovoltaics
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Supply Side Management
Biomass: “Waste to Energy”
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Supply Side Management
Tidal
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Demand Side Management
Conservation instead of New Construction
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Demand Side Management
Consumption Control: More efficient lamps More efficient motors More efficient appliances Controls (sensors, etc.) More efficient buildings
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Demand Side Management
Demand Control: Manual (timers, management) Automated (EMS, BAS, PC) Loads: Sheddable Non-sheddable S: F p.1157
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Demand Side Management
Utility Incentives: Time of Day Rates: load shifting Demand Reduction Rebates: demand limiting Equipment Rebates: consumption reduction Contract Renegotiation: cost reduction UM Hospital, Ann Arbor MI AKA Associates
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Demand Side Management
Industry Incentives: Partnering Energy Codes Tax Credits Rating Programs LEED Energy Star Living Building Challenge International Programs UM Hospital, Ann Arbor MI AKA Associates
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Design Practice Initiatives
Design Certifications: LEED Energy Star Green Globes Phillip Merrill Environmental Center, Annapolis MD SmithGroup, 2000
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Design Practice Initiatives
Stewardship of the Built Environment =Historic Preservation + Sustainability Conserves resources Reduces material streams Revitalizes neighborhoods Maintains “sense of place” Increases livability Big-D Construction Headquarters, Salt Lake City, UT GSBS, 2005 1st LEED “GOLD” building in Utah
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Environmental Controls
Utility Rate Structures
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Utility Rate Structures
Billing Components Connection Charge Consumption Demand Power Factor S: F p. 1157
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Utility Rate Structures
Block Rate $X1 for first Y1 kwh $X2 for next Y2 kwh … Energy Charge $X per kwh
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Utility Rate Structures
Ratchet Clause Charge to insure capacity based on previous peak demand PEAK DEMAND AVG DEMAND
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Utility Rate Structures
Time of Day Rates $X1/kwh for on peak hours $X2/kwh for off peak hours … Uninterruptible Power Supply
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Example Large General Service Rate $11.25/month service connection
Demand charge: $9.72/kw Energy charge: $0.0682/kwh first 200 kwh $0.0632/kwh for remainder Ratchet clause: 11 month
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Example Previous 11 month peak demand: 25 KW Month Kwh KW 1 750 30
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Example Previous 11 month peak demand: 25 KW Month Kwh KW w/o ratchet
$351.25 $269.07 $252.39 $358.05 $390.37 $232.32 $253.03 $199.37 $224.50 $255.55 $263.38 $274.99 $3,324.27
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Example Previous 11 month peak demand: 25 KW
Month Kwh KW w/o ratchet w/ratchet $ $351.25 $ $346.83 $ $339.87 $ $358.05 $ $390.37 $ $387.84 $ $389.11 $ $384.05 $ $389.74 $ $391.63 $ $389.74 $ $391.63 $3, $4, %
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