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Title Introduction to EPA’s ENERGY STAR Tools Katy Hatcher ENERGY STAR National Manager, Public Sector US EPA.

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Presentation on theme: "Title Introduction to EPA’s ENERGY STAR Tools Katy Hatcher ENERGY STAR National Manager, Public Sector US EPA."— Presentation transcript:

1 Title Introduction to EPA’s ENERGY STAR Tools Katy Hatcher ENERGY STAR National Manager, Public Sector US EPA

2 What is ENERGY STAR for Buildings?  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency energy management program providing proven solutions to help public and private sector building owners and managers reduce their energy consumption..  Provides proven solutions to help public and private sector building owners and managers reduce their energy consumption.  Works in markets with a focus on: Public sector (government, K-12, higher ed) Commercial property (offices, retail, hotels) Healthcare Small business and congregations

3 500 Boylston St. Boston, MA Albuquerque Indian Hospital Albuquerque, NM Parkside Elementary School Buffalo, MN Blue Earth County Courthouse Mankato, MN Also ENERGY STAR Westin San Francisco Airport Millbrae, CA LL&E Tower New Orleans, LA

4 What is ENERGY STAR for Buildings?  Thousands of Partners operating more than 11 billion square feet of space (nearly 20% of space in the U.S.).  Over 70,000 buildings measure and track their energy performance, energy costs, and carbon emissions with ENERGY STAR.

5 What is ENERGY STAR for Buildings?  National and Local Recognition ENERGY STAR Partner Designed to Earn the ENERGY STAR ENERGY STAR Label ENERGY STAR Leader ENERGY STAR Partner of the Year

6 Why Energy Efficiency in Commercial Buildings?  The buildings in which we work, shop, play, and educate our children use $200 billion of electricity and natural gas each year.  Commercial buildings and industrial facilities generate nearly 50% of U.S. carbon dioxide emissions.  30% of energy consumed in commercial buildings is used unnecessarily or inefficiently.  According to the U.S. Green Building Council, GHG emissions from commercial buildings are projected to grow faster than any other sector over the next 25 years – about 1.8 percent per year.  IMMEDIATE, LOW-COST emission reduction opportunities for cities – EXISTING city and private sector buildings.

7 Benefits of Energy Efficiency in Commercial Buildings - Financial  Leading companies realize that energy efficiency can have a high return-on-investment and is necessary in order to remain competitive.  Businesses and organizations that are leaders in energy efficiency use about 30 percent less energy than their competitors.  Financial benefits of energy efficiency include: Buildings that have earned the ENERGY STAR save more than 50 cents per square foot than average buildings and more than $2 per square foot than inefficient buildings. Commercial properties may increase net operating income and building asset value by 5 percent. Corporate real estate owners can lower operating costs by $25,000 per year for every 50,000 square feet of typical office space. Full-service hotels that improve energy efficiency by 10 percent see an increased average daily rate of $1.35. By reducing energy costs by just 5 percent, for-profit hospitals can increase earnings by one penny per share.

8 What is ENERGY STAR for Buildings?  Free technical resources: Tools to benchmark and track energy performance in buildings Energy Management Guidelines Assistance for architects on designing energy efficient buildings Case studies and best practices from leaders Calculators to track returns on energy efficiency investments Training Materials to communicate with citizens, employees, stakeholders, and the media about energy efficiency efforts.

9 ENERGY STAR Energy Management Guideliness: a commitment to continuous energy performance improvement. The ENERGY STAR Approach

10 ENERGY STAR Teaming Guide “How-to” guide on building an energy management team Teaming up to Save Energy Checklist –Organizing your energy team –Starting your energy program –Building capacity –Sustaining the team –Maintaining momentum

11 Fuel Efficiency MPG Is 18 MPG high or low for an automobile? Energy Performance EPA Benchmarking Is 80 kBtu/SF/YR high or low for a building? Is Your Building Performing Well?

12 1 Worst PerformersBest Performers Number of Buildings 25 50 75 90 Top performing buildings use 3 to 4 times less energy per ft 2 than the worst performers. Newer buildings are equally represented across all quartiles. Based on a sample of 4,000 buildings nationwide. 10 39% of buildings with a rating of 75 or better are less than 25 years old 42% of buildings with a rating between 25 and 74 are less than 25 years old 35% of buildings with a rating between 0 and 24 are less than 25 years old 121.1 29.9165.786.0 339.4 EPA Performance Rating & Energy Intensity (kBtu/ft 2 -year) New Doesn’t Always Equal Efficient

13 Technology Doesn’t Guarantee High Performance Note: “CBECS” is the Energy Information Administration’s Commercial Building Energy Consumption Survey, http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/cbecs/contents.html 0% 25% 50% 75% 100% VAV EMS Economizer VSDs Motion Sensors Energy Audit ENERGY STAR 1999 - 2001 61.4 kBtu/ft2/yr CBECS Bottom 25% 226.3 kBtu/ft2/yr `

14 Portfolio Manager – Helping You Track Your Performance  Free online tool where you can: Benchmark the energy use of all of your buildings – all will receive an EUI (energy use intensity) and some will receive ratings on a 1-100 scale. Track changes in energy use over time in single buildings, groups of buildings, or entire portfolios. Track cost savings and CO 2 emissions. Apply for ENERGY STAR recognition. Track water usage.  Free on-line live trainings offered monthly.  http://www.energystar.gov/benchmark http://www.energystar.gov/benchmark  Louisville-Jefferson County Metro government currently initiating benchmarking of all city buildings with Portfolio Manager.

15 Tracking Campaigns: Master Accounts Objective: Allows organizations to track progress of campaigns, for example: MD can track buildings across agencies Energy saving competitions among buildings and agencies Process: MD creates a Master Account Master Account appears in a public registry Individual users can share facilities with Master Account Master Account holder can view progress for all facilities that have been shared

16 Seattle BOMA Kilowatt Crackdown Promoting leadership in energy efficient building operations. –Participants will benchmark their buildings in Portfolio Manager by 1/25/2008 using 2007 utility data. –Winners receive cash prizes, and those qualifying for the ENERGY STAR label received free engineering certification. –Prizes include a private suite party at a Seattle Mariners game, tickets to the BOMA golf tournament, and a catered lunch for 12.

17 ENERGY STAR Contacts www.energystar.gov Katy Hatcher ENERGY STAR National Manager, Public Sector Hatcher.Caterina@epa.gov Leslie Cook The Cadmus Group, Inc. 703-247-6148, lcook@cadmusgroup.com


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