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N ETWORK PC P OWER M ANAGEMENT June 28, 2011 Regional Technical Forum Presented by: Bob Tingleff SBW Consulting, Inc.
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Status Provisionally deemed UES since May, 2010 SBW presented an update May, 2011 Incorporated Cadmus/PSE and Avista studies Minor changes based on review of literature HVAC factor findings Different than lighting Difficult to pin down RTF Decision: Use lighting HVAC factors Large office, K-12, Other (small office/RTU HVAC) This path incorporates an impact appropriate to building type/HVAC system 5/3/2011
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Measure Definition – 9 measures rather than 1 due to HVAC factors 3 building/business types Large Office (central HVAC) K-12 Other, represented by Small Office (RTU) 3 HVAC system types Electric Heat pump Gas 5/3/2011
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Key Parameters Power draw of desktop Mix of Class A, B, C, D, Energy Star compliant and not Power draw of monitor 2008 E-Star LCD (lower power when sleeping) Baseline time spent in low and high power Shift in annual hours due to measure 23% of annual hours shift from high to low power Supported by Cadmus/PSE study Consistent with earlier studies 5/3/2011
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Key Parameters Rate of successful installation of power management software May change over time – new computers, software defeated intentionally or accidentally, bugs, IT diligence No empirical basis for measure persistence Load shapes show far from complete success (next slide) Previous analysis derated savings based on an assumed installation rate Current analysis already includes the installation rate in the average hourly shift 5/3/2011
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Do we need to adjust savings by business type? Because of HVAC factors we now have K-12, Large Office, Other (small office HVAC) Annual and daily schedules differ Adjusting the overall load shape to match K-12, office results in an annual savings difference of 5% Other schedules are hard to quantify => Use office hours for all measures Two Procost load shapes: Office, K-12 5/3/2011
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Savings Impact Without HVAC factors: 26% increase Monitor savings increased from 11 kWh/yr. to 18 Lower power draw in sleep mode in newer monitors Previous analysis derrated savings by assumed installation rate of power management software This analysis finds that empirical studies already incorporate this factor Newer computers have lower sleep-mode power New studies find a couple more percent shifted to low power by measure 5/3/2011
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Savings Impact: Difference with Cadmus/PSE study Cadmus: 128 kWh/yr. This analysis: 145 kWh/yr. Monitor savings: 18 kWh/yr. vs. 11 Idle power draw of desktop: 64W vs. 60W 64W is based on sales data Could argue that schools and other likely environments will buy smaller computers Don’t really know the mix Cadmus data show many computers at 80W or more (63W average at non-participant sites) 5/3/2011
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Recommendations Set status to Active Sunset criteria Desktop power draw will change Baseline rate of power management may change 2 years max 5/3/2011
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RTF Proposed Motion: “I _________ move that the RTF approve the Network PC Power Management UES measure to Active status with a sunset date of July, 2013.”
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