Title: INDUSTRIAL PROGRAM PLANNING COMMITTEE CONFERENCE CALL
1INDUSTRIAL PROGRAMPLANNING COMMITTEECONFERENCE
CALL
- Ted Jones
- Sr. Industrial Program Manager
- April 2, 2008
2Industrial Sector Is a Big Opportunity
U.S. industry represents
- 37 of U.S. natural gas demand
- 29 of U.S. electricity demand
- 30 of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions
- More energy use than any other single G8 nation
- Large opportunities for
- Energy reduction
- Emissions reductions
- Fuel flexibility
- 32 quads of energy
- gt200,000 sites
- 14.3 million jobs
- 5,900 billion in shipments
- 980 billion in exports
3Baseline Energy Consumption (CA)(Source
California Industrial Existing Construction
Energy Efficiency Potential Study, May 2006)
4Energy for Heat, Power, and Electricity Generation
- Process/Assembly
- (80)
- Process Heating
- Process Cooling Refrigeration
- Machine Drive
- Electro-Chemical Processes
- Other
- Boilers/Steam/Cogeneration (10)
- Conventional Boiler Use
- Cogeneration
- Building Use (Non-process)
- (7)
- Facility HVAC
- Facility Lighting
- Conventional Electricity Generation
5Industrial Sector CEE Coverage
CEE Initiatives Motors Motor Mgmt. Motor
Systems Compressed Air Pump
Systems Transformers Water/Waste Water
Fired Heaters 31
Motor Systems 23
Steam 26
Process Cooling2
Facilities 10
Other 4
Electro-chemical4
6Energy Consumption (Tbtu) by Industry and
Component
7Process Energy Use by SIC and Application
8For Example Process Heating
- The direct process end use in which energy is
used to raise the temperature of substances
involved in the manufacturing process. - Fluid Heating - Metal Non-metal Heating
- Calcining - Smelting, Agglomeration
- Heat Treating - Curing and Forming
- Drying - Other
9Program opportunity?
- Is it a new, more efficient process technology?
- No silver bullet (although there are some
technologies we should take a look at, e.g., DOE
Super Boiler) - Current environment for broader and deeper energy
savings is driving members to re-assess
industrial energy savings in the process area and
to identify program opportunities. - targeting industrial sub-sectors
- identifying cross-cutting, process-specific
measures
10Cross-cutting Opportunities
11Emerging Program Models
- Sector-Specific Approaches
- Northwest Energy Efficiency Alliance is focusing
on food processing and pulp and paper - PGE and SCE are focusing on data centers,
bio-tech, water treatment, agriculture, food
processing, wineries and oil refining - NYSERDA is focusing on sector-specific
strategies, such as hospitality, municipal water
and wastewater and industry.
12Industrial Process Energy is an Emerging
Opportunity for Programs
- CEE members are coming together through the
Industrial Program Planning Committee - to provide a forum for members to share program
strategies in the industrial sector - to tap into the collective experience of member
industrial efficiency programs (Technical
Assistance, Custom Projects, Demonstration
Projects, SPC/Standard Offer) - to identify and prioritize industrial
opportunities resources (DOE, EPA) - to recommend program strategies, as appropriate
13Why Now?
- Greater motivation to tap into process-related
savings now - Opportunity for more savings electricity,
natural gas demand savings - Greater flexibility in program design and
performance measurement
14Thank you
- CEE staff contact information
- Ted Jones, Sr. Program Manager
- 617-589-3949, ext. 230
- tjones_at_cee1.org