Title: Preliminary Impact Analysis of SCEs 0405 HEES Program
1Preliminary Impact Analysis of SCEs 04-05 HEES
Program
- Population Regression using Consumption Trend of
Participants Neighborhoods as Covariates - John Peterson, Athens Research
- Carol Yin, Yinsight
- CALMAC, October 17, 2007
2SCEs long standing interest in energy savings
from home audits
- RER study (1997) of SCEs 1993 1995 residential
audit programs - Net 1st year savings In Home (433 kWh),
Telephone (154 kWh), Mail-In (123 kWh) - Ridge study (2002, on CALMAC.org)
- Net 1st year savings In Home (440 kWh),
Telephone (185 kWh), Mail-In (123 kWh), Online
(123 kWh) - BUT, savings estimates are outdated
3Benefits of using the ecological consumption
trend
- Consumption related variables arguably relatively
homogeneous at block group/dwelling level - Accounts for weather changes and difficulties
linking weather station data to small areas - Accounts for economic differences between areas,
and changes over time within those relatively
homogenous areas - Accounts for demographic features, cultural and
behavioral trends
4Method
- Models estimated at a gross population level
whether or not the customer has participated in
04-05 HEES - Preliminary analysis does NOT track causal flow
of savings from recommendation adoptions - Filtered 04-05 participants on the basis of
- 12 months of pre-audit consumption data, 12
months of post-audit and post 10 month deadband
data (others deadbands were tested). - The ecological consumption trend
- Calculated from calendarized residential
consumption data from 2002-2007 - Averaged by dwelling type (single family/other)
within geography (block group/tract/zip) so that
each participant compared with at least 100
neighbors - Ecological consumption data scaled on participant
by participant basis, so pre-period average
consumption of participant and neighbors matched.
5Preliminary Results
- Based on simple ecological adjustment
meatgrinder - OVERALL RESULT FOR SCE lt 200 kWh per year. IN
HOME AUDIT about 50 more savings than MAIL-IN. - LONG VERSION ON-LINE Negligible savings, yet
some evidence that install recommendations lead
to savings.
AUDIT - RECOMMENDATION KWH/DAY
PATTERN IMPACT
STDERR KWH/YR T_VAL ---------------------
--------------------------------------------------
-- IH_AUDIT, ANY REC -0.8621
0.0546 -314.7 -15.79
IH_AUDIT,PRACTICE -0.8621 0.0546
-314.7 -15.79 IH_AUDIT, INSTALL
-0.8693 0.0561 -317.3 -15.50
MI_AUDIT, ANY REC -0.5802
0.0203 -211.8 -28.58
MI_AUDIT,PRACTICE -0.5805 0.0203
-211.9 -28.60 MI_AUDIT, INSTALL
-0.8110 0.0260 -296.0 -31.19
OL_AUDIT, ANY REC 0.1005 0.0360
36.7 2.79 OL_AUDIT,PRACTICE
0.1010 0.0360 36.9 2.81
OL_AUDIT, INSTALL -0.2850
0.0554 -104.0 -5.14
6Remaining Issues and Recommendations
- Ecological trend consumption approach is an
effective way to isolate adjusted gross savings - Applicable to most consumption analyses of
residential and small commercial programs - Still need to track savings that flow causally
through adoptions of HEES recommendations - Need to understand measure-level impacts
- But we have extreme collinearity due to
- Too many measures. Huge numbers of
recommendations were made to every 04-05
participant.
7More questions?
- John Peterson
- Athens Research
- petersjw_at_aol.com
- (626) 798-3147
- Carol Yin
- Yinsight
- cyin_at_yinsight.net
- (626) 676-2198
8Ecological Consumption Adjustment Approach Path
Model of Role of Ecological Trend
- 1. Almost no direct impacts of weather upon
customer consumption. - 2. Virtually all of the weather impacts flow
through the ecological consumption term. - 3. The net neighborhood trend term is very
strong, 0.8931. - Since weather only accounts for about 21 of
neighborhood trend, this means that a great deal
of the neighborhood adjustment involves either
non-weather variables or micro-climatic impacts
that are not well captured by weather stations.
This unique impact is .8865 .8931 or 0.792.