By David Pospisil
Guest Blogger, Energy Efficiency
Markets
June 6, 2012
Energy benchmarking
can help you better understand your commercial property’s energy use and
monitor performance over time. It allows for comparisons among similar building
types and helps identify which ones could operate more efficiently.
The Environmental
Protection Agency and its ENERGY STAR® Program offers a free online tool called
Portfolio Manager that allows users to track and assess building energy
consumption for a single building or an entire portfolio. Portfolio Manager can
help comply with local energy laws, set investment priorities, identify
under-performing buildings, verify efficiency improvements and receive EPA
recognition for superior energy performance.
If you have already
been through the benchmarking process, are you on track to increase your
building’s energy performance rating this year? While benchmarking helps you
understand the current state of your building’s performance, an energy audit
can help you identify and prioritize opportunities for substantial energy and
operational savings.
Not all energy audits
are equal however. The American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and
Air-Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE) recognizes three levels that vary in scope
and cost:
· Walk-Through
Assessment (Level 1): This is
the least costly of the three levels. It provides an energy bill analysis and
possibly a brief survey of the facility. Subsequently, the report outlines
no-cost and low-cost opportunities.
· Energy
Survey and Analysis (Level 2):
A more detailed analysis taking into consideration the owners' operations and
maintenance, constraints and economic factors. The final report may include
potential capital-intensive energy efficiency opportunities.
· Detailed
Analysis (Investment Grade Audit) (Level 3): This analysis provides a higher degree of data collection,
monitoring and analysis and focuses on capital-intensive opportunities. The
report usually includes detailed analysis on project cost and savings and may
include a timeline for implementation for each measure.
Benchmarking and
energy analysis work together as integral steps of a business’ energy
management plan. The benchmarking process can help you identify your building’s
performance rating and an energy audit can help you effectively evaluate the
energy-saving opportunities so you can understand where your investment in
sustainability will have the greatest impact.
Incentives from
government and/or utility-based programs may be available to help pay for the
cost of an energy audit, as well as energy efficiency upgrades. For example,
the Con Edison Commercial and Industrial Energy Efficiency Program offers:
· Payment of up to 50% of costs, with a
cap of $67,000, for a Level 3 energy audit
· Rebates for high-efficiency electric
and gas equipment including lighting fixtures, LED exit signs, chillers,
packaged heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning systems, motors, water and
steam boilers
· Performance-based custom incentives for
installing high-efficiency equipment or energy-saving solutions not eligible for
equipment rebates
Check to see what
funding may be available in your area.
Join the discussion on LinkedIn
(Con-Edison-Commercial-Industrial), Facebook (ConEd Green Team C&I),
Twitter (ConEd Green Team C&I) and YouTube (ConEd Green Team C&I).
David Pospisil is Program Manager of
Con Edison's Commercial & Industrial Energy Efficiency Program, New York,
NY.
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