World Energy Perspectives Energy Efficiency Technologies Overview Report
Business Perspectives on Energy Efficiency from UTC
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Transcript of Business Perspectives on Energy Efficiency from UTC
Kelly RomanoPresidentBuilding Systems and ServicesCarrier Corporation
September 17, 2009
UNITED TECHNOLOGIES$58.7B revenues; seven business units
Heating, ventilating, cooling & refrigeration systems
Elevators, escalators, moving walkways, people movers & horizontal transportation systems
Aircraft engines, gas turbines & space propulsion systems
HelicoptersIndustrial & aerospace systems
Security & fire protection services
Clean power, cooling / heating solutions
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EVOLUTION OF UTC EH&S GOALS
1997 – 2006Compliance +Conservation
2007 – 2010Value Chain
Focus
1991 – 1996Compliance
2011-2020Eliminate adverse
impacts
+ Key Suppliers+ UTC Products
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ENVIRONMENT, HEALTH & SAFETY 1997-2006 results
Energy (BTUs)
56%19%
Air Emissions (lbs.)
Waste (lbs.)
69%44%
52%13%
Recycled
66%39%
Non-Recycled
72%49%
Water (gal.)
Normalized
Absolute
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ENVIRONMENT, HEALTH & SAFETY GOALS2010 goals for internal operations and productsFactory & operations metrics
NonGreenhouse Gas
Emissions
20%
GreenhouseGases(CO2 e) Waste
12% 10%Industrial Process
30%Non-Recycled
10% 10%
Water
Consumption Chemicals Discharged
Product metrics
10%Packaging
in product packaging
100%Materials of Concern
eliminated in new products
10%Energy Efficiency
from product baseline
FinancialSocialEnvironmental
Giving: Environmental
Ethics
Energy
Water
Waste
Carbon costing
Air
GHG
Compliance
Safety
Giving: Engineering
Giving: Arts
Governance
Logistics
Transportation
Product safety
Supplier EH&S Impacts
Education/ ESP
Supplier EH&SExpectations
Product CarbonFootprints
Product MaterialContent
ProductEfficiency
MaterialsOf Concern
ProductPackaging
Product LCA
Financial Social Environmental
VolunteerismProduct
Investment
Project Investment
Diversity
Emerging issues:Regulatory, climate, H&S,
material scarcity, ecosystems, etc.
Transparency
Sustainability Investor
Relations
Sustainability
Develo
ped Developing
UTC SUSTAINABILITY ACTIVITIES
Sustainability Communications
SupplierLabor
Practices
Codes of Conduct
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GHG REDUCTION STRATEGYEnergy & GHG reductions = lower operating costs
Auditing of existing sites: identify opportunities
Maximize efficiency of older systems
Maximize efficiency potential of new systems, new leases and fleet
Leverage cogeneration
Maximize efficiency of new sites: Green buildings/zero-net energy buildings
Past 2007- 2010 Future
Supply chain energy and GHG reductions
Leverage case studies for UTC product sales
2006 Corporate Responsibility ReportUTC Standard Practice-017
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39% HVAC
18% Lighting
9% IT / electronics
10% Water heating
24% Other
40%
32%
28%
Transportation
Industry
Buildings*
100%
Source: 2007 Department of Energy Buildings Energy Databook
* Includes Commercial and Residential buildings
(Btu)
U.S. ENERGY CONSUMPTION
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WBCSD ENERGY EFFICIENCY IN BUILDINGSPath to zero net energy buildings
2007/2008 2008/2009
Perception that certified sustainable building will cost 17% more than a “standard” building - reality is the additional cost is 5%.
Perception that buildings CO2 impact is 19% -reality is 40% of CO2 emissions.
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LEED certified is UTC standard for all new construction
LEED Gold is target
Planned projects total ~ 1 million ft2
Otis TEDA manufacturing facility in Tianjin, China is LEED Gold
Pratt & Whitney engine overhaul facility in Shanghai, China is LEED Silver
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LEED CERTIFIEDGlobal building policy
LEED CERTIFIEDU.S. Existing Buildings
Charlotte, NC
First UTC manufacturing facility in world LEED-EB19% more energy efficient*No irrigation for lawn and landscapingOver 80% recycling rate
Huntington, IN
30% more energy efficient*Reduced water usageInstituted green housekeepingOver 50% recycling rate
*Compared to other buildings with similar function
Chiller manufacturing facility
Electronic controls manufacturing facility
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WASHINGTON, D.C. PROJECTS
EMSI®Founding Farmers Restaurant
Washington, D.C.
NORESCONational Gallery of Art
Washington, D.C.
NORESCOU.S. Capital Complex
Washington, D.C.
LEED® Gold Certification
80% Energy Star Appliances
Energy efficiency light system that exceeds ASHRAE 90.1 lighting power standards by 10%
Average Annual Savings: $350,000
VFD replacement program Energy efficient lighting
upgrade programInstallation of bypass
ductwork to the NGA HVAC system
Average Annual Savings: $2.0 million
Replacement or retrofit of nearly 200,000 lighting fixtures
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ENERGY EFFICIENT SOLUTIONS
Elevators that use less energy when lifting loads – and give back energy on descent
Requires up to 90% less water than traditional sprinkler systems
Integrated security solutions provide access control, visitor management, and
video management capability
Building automation system controls HVAC, lighting and other systems,
optimizing energy consumption
Energy audit and sustainability services to reduce energy use and operating expenses
with Foxfire™ technology
Combined cooling, heating and power solutions can double energy efficiency over most conventional grid sources
The world’s most efficient non-ozone-depleting water-cooled chiller
Clean power, cooling / heating power
Buildings have the greatest potential and are the cheapest option
Address both new buildings and retrofit / replace existing buildings
Investments are needed to push the market.
The market alone will not do it
Simple subsystem approaches will not be enough
All actors need to be involved
ROADMAP TO FUTUREWhole building, whole life = CO2 reductions
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