Title: Co-Benefits of Industrial Energy Efficiency: Insights and Lessons
1Co-Benefits of Industrial Energy Efficiency
Insights and Lessons
IEA Roundtable on Industrial Productivity and
Competitiveness Impacts Paris, France January 27,
2014 Robert Bruce Lung Industrial Energy
Efficiency Advisor
2- Poppa got a job with the TVA,
- He bought a washing machine,
- And then a Chevrolet
Alabama Song of the South
3Introduction
- Conventional approaches to quantifying energy
savings of energy efficiency - Co-benefits of energy efficiency in manufacturing
- Impacts of quantifying co-benefits of industrial
energy efficiency - Lessons for programs/policies
4Conventional Approaches
- Energy savings potential of energy efficiency
evaluation methods - Simple payback
- Discounted payback
- Internal rate of return
- Net present value
- Return on investment
- Lifecycle cost analysis
- All of these methods treat only quantified energy
savings - Based on energy baselines and estimated savings
generated during energy assessments
5Co-benefits
- Energy efficiency in manufacturing results in
quantifiable co-benefits - Production increases (higher absolute and/or per
unit increases) - Improved product quality (fewer passes, fewer
warranty claims) - Lower maintenance costs (especially repairs)
- Reduced emissions (especially for thermal energy
sources) - Lower use of other resources (water, treatment
chemicals, raw materials) - Safer work environments (fewer sick days taken)
- Fiscal rebates and/or incentive payments
- Co-benefits are not systematically quantified
because they are greatly underappreciated and
rarely estimated during energy assessments - Omitting co-benefits understates full impact of
energy efficiency
6Quantified Impacts of Co-benefits
- When co-benefits are quantified, ROI metrics
always improve - Worrel et al. (2003)
- Simple payback of energy savings only 4.2 years
- Simple payback of energy savings and co-benefits
1.9 years - Lung et al. (2005)
- Total energy savings 47.7 million
- Total co-benefits 21 million
- Simple payback of energy savings only 1.43
years - Simple payback of energy savings and co-benefits
.99 years - Co-benefits were quantified during
post-implementation interviews - Quantifying productivity benefits enhances
business case for energy efficiency - Also, important implications for economic analysis
7Productivity Changes and Economic Impact
- Just a 0.3 decline in productivity of the U.S.
economy could cause GDP (in 2005 dollars) to be
2.7 trillion smaller by 2040 - If U.S. economy is 2.7 trillion smaller in
2040, this implies - 800 billion fewer in 2040 than might otherwise
be available for investment and/or government
revenues - Between 2012 and 2040 6 trillion fewer
available for investment and government revenues - Approximately 15-18 million fewer total jobs
between 2012 and 2040
Courtesy of John Skip Laitner
8How to Quantify Macro-Economic Impacts of Energy
Efficiency?
- Integrate energy efficiency into economic
production models - 3-factor Cobb-Douglas example
- Output ALa Kb Ec
- GDP ALa Kb Ec (E production E imports)
- A is a productivity parameter, L is labor, K is
physical capital, E is energy used - a, b, c represent output elasticities of labor,
capital and energy - Output elasticities measure sensitivity of output
to changes in inputs (A, L, K and E) - Different values of Energy (E) affect GDP growth
- Energy efficiency reduces E, freeing up capital
and labor for other uses and increases the
productivity parameter A - Hence, energy efficiency can lead to higher GDP
growth
9Cobb-Douglas Model Example in U.S.
- Assumptions
- Energy intensity reduction 30 between 1990 and
2030 - Energy cost of 12.95/MMBtu (2009 data from AEO)
- Energy use of 113.6 Exajoules (2009 data from
AEO) - Median wages of 65,000/year (2009)
- Labor force of 164.4 million workers
- 10 return on rented physical capital
- Physical capital stock valued at 60 trillion
(2000 dollars) - Results
- Business as usual scenario Value of used energy
1,030 billion, GDP 20.1 billion, energy
intensity 5.65 - 30 reduction in energy intensity scenario Value
of used energy 721 billion, GDP 21.9
billion, energy intensity 3.63
10Conclusion/Lessons for Programs and Policies
- Conventional approaches to analyzing energy
efficiency understate its impact - Quantifying co-benefits of energy efficiency has
two important implications - Truer understanding of impact on output/GDP
- More compelling business case
- A greater emphasis on energy-efficiency led
productivity could yield more robust economic
growth - Energy assessments need to be integrated with
quality/competitiveness assessments to - Properly estimate co-benefits
- Account for energy savings from measures intended
to improve productivity
11Contact Information
- Robert Bruce Lung
- industrialeeadvisor_at_gmail.com
- 202-262-7897