Impact of Smart Grids on Intelligent Buildings and Connected Cities Rawlson O’Neil King...

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Impact of Smart Grids on Intelligent Buildings and Connected Cities Rawlson O’Neil King Communications Director Continental Automated Buildings Association

Transcript of Impact of Smart Grids on Intelligent Buildings and Connected Cities Rawlson O’Neil King...

Page 1: Impact of Smart Grids on Intelligent Buildings and Connected Cities Rawlson O’Neil King Communications Director Continental Automated Buildings Association.

Impact of Smart Gridson Intelligent Buildingsand Connected Cities

Rawlson O’Neil KingCommunications DirectorContinental Automated Buildings Association

Page 2: Impact of Smart Grids on Intelligent Buildings and Connected Cities Rawlson O’Neil King Communications Director Continental Automated Buildings Association.

CABA

Non-profit trade organization promotes home and building automation

“The knowledge-based forum forindustry leaders who advance the use of technology and integrated systems in the global home and building industry.”

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Smart Grid Impact on Intelligent Buildings Research Study 2011

The Continental Automated Buildings Association (CABA)CABA and the following CABA Members funded this Research Project:

Ruby Sponsor:

Emerald Sponsors

Diamond Sponsors

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Making the Grid Smart

Smart grid features expand energy efficiency beyond the grid into buildings by coordinating low priority energy consuming devices to take advantage of the most desirable energy sources

Smart grids coordinate power production from lots of small power producers - otherwise problematic for power systems operators at local utilities

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Focus of the StudySmart Grid Commercial Buildings Business Opportunities

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= Focus of this study

(On Site)

Incl. Net Zero Energy Buildings

Source: CABA’s 2011 Smart Grid Impact on Intelligent Buildings

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Smart Grid - Definition

Six Chief Characteristics:

• Enables informed participation by all parties

• Accommodates all generation and storage options

• Enables new products, services, and markets

• Provides the power quality for the range of needs

• Optimizes asset utilization and operating efficiently; and

• Operates resiliently to disturbance, attacks, and natural disasters

An advanced power grid for the 21st century ... adding and integrating many varieties of digital computing and communication technologies and services with the power-delivery infrastructure. Bi-directional flows of energy and two-way communication and control capabilities will enable an array of new functionalities and applications that go well beyond “smart” meters for homes and business

Source: NIST Framework and Roadmap for Smart Grid Interoperability Standards Release 1.0 (Draft), September 2009.

6Source: CABA’s 2011 Smart Grid Impact on Intelligent Buildings

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Building Management System (BMS)

A computer-based control system - controls and monitors building HVAC and electrical equipment - commonly also systems for lighting, power, security, fire detection and alarm

Comprises central computers, workstations, PCs, direct digital control (DDC) controllers, display panels, communication elements such as routers, switches, sensors for temperature, humidity, CO2, pressure etc. , meters/data loggers

Outputs typically connect to hydraulic control valve and actuator assemblies, air damper actuator assemblies and variable speed drives.

Software for monitoring, control and management usually configured hierarchically and use manufacturers’ proprietary communications protocols or Internet protocols and open standards such as BACnet, LonWorks, Modbus, XML, SOAP, DeviceNet etc. Source: BSRIA

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Non-Residential Building Stock - North America (USA & Canada)

6.5 Million Buildings

Source: Various including U.S. Energy Information Administration, National Resources Canada, US DOE, Department of Defense Base Structure Report FY 2009 Baseline (Note: Excludes 26% Department of Defense buildings which are used for housing, or troop housing and mess facilities), and BSRIA estimates.

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BMS Penetration by Number of Buildings – by Commercial Building Size Category

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Number of Utilities in North America

3,100 Utilities in the USA (approx)• About 100 Investor owned companies (produce 70% of the electricity)• About 1000 Rural cooperatives• About 2000 Municipal power companies 380 Utilities in Canada (approx)• 16 major electric utilities:

• 8 provincially owned• 7 investor-owned• 2 municipally owned• 2 are territorial Crown Corporations

• Additional 4 privately-owned in Ontario• About 364 smaller utilities across Canada (87% located in Ontario)• Most owned by municipalities. Do not own generating capacity; usually

purchase power from the major utility in their province.• Several small investor-owned with own generating capacity.

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Why do we Need a Smart Grid?

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Shave the peaks Increase grid stability and reliability Improve efficiency – energy, consumption

data management

Save on energy costs Buy at optimal price Empower customers

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Blackout Areas2010  

California 508New York 176Texas 145Ohio 135Washington 125New Jersey 121Pennsylvania 120Florida 118Michigan 116Wisconsin 106

2010 2009Ontario – 64 Ontario – 80 British Columbia – 43 British Columbia – 23 Alberta – 22 Saskatchewan – 8 Saskatchewan – 20 Alberta – 6 (tie) Nova Scotia – 12 Nova Scotia – 6 (tie) Quebec – 11 Quebec – 6 (tie) Manitoba – 9 (tie) Manitoba – 4 (tie) New Brunswick – 9 (tie) New Brunswick – 4 (tie) Newfoundland – 2 Prince Edward Island – 4 (tie) Prince Edward Island – 1(tie) Northwest Territories – 1 Northwest Territories – 1 (tie)  

Canada Provinces and territories ranked by number of reported outages:

USAThe top 10 blackout states include some of the states that house the most data centers:

Source: Eaton Blackout Report 2010

Source: Eaton Annual Report 2010

Page 13: Impact of Smart Grids on Intelligent Buildings and Connected Cities Rawlson O’Neil King Communications Director Continental Automated Buildings Association.

Hurricane Sandy

October 2012

Largest Atlantic Hurricane on record

Secondly costly hurricane In American history

$50 billion in damages

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This picture shows the moment that the Consolidated Edison electricity substation in Manhattan exploded, causing a quarter of a million people in the area to lose their power supply.

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Main Components of the Smart Grid Market (US$ bn)

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Source: BSRIA

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Comparison of Smart Grid Market with Adjacent Markets (US$bn)

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Source: BSRIA

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Smart Meter Installations

Residential Commercial Industrial Total

USA 6,564,949 738,294 23,770 7,327,013

Canada (Assumes segmentation proportions similar to USA)

4,479,963 503,816 16,221 5,000,000

 Total North America 11,044,912 1,242,110 39,991 12,327,013

  89.6% 10.1% 0.3% 100.0%

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Definition Demand Response 1 (DR1)

•Existed for the last 15 years

•The aim is to reduce/shave/curtail the demand peaks

•Most end-users respond manually but some also automated

•Most end-users typically reduce the load 5 – 10 days a year

•Most end-users will be told 24 hours in advance

•DR1 sites are not necessarily linked to energy efficiency

•Some end-users provide emergency DR e.g. shorter notice and shorter intervals, mostly automated

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Definition Demand Response 2 (DR2)

• DR2 is more interactive

• Client energy profile

• The energy consumption will be monitored and system faults identified

• Usage data will be available every 5 – 30 minutes

• Many different software packages are available to be linked to the client’s BMS

• DR2 is mostly automated

• There are different levels of DR2. More advanced DR2 would include buying and selling electricity

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Page 20: Impact of Smart Grids on Intelligent Buildings and Connected Cities Rawlson O’Neil King Communications Director Continental Automated Buildings Association.

How will the Smart Grid impact buildings?

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DR 1 Saving electricity bill: 3 – 5%

DR 2Saving electricity bill:

15-20%

Energy usage per equipment/zone and fault

finding

Plan electricity consumption: reduce when

high, use when low

Buy and sell electricity. Produce and store

Energy efficiency

-Smart metering-Energy profile-Energy date available

On-site generation / energy efficiency

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How will the Smart Grid impact buildings?- Intelligent / Converged building

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Information collected and analysed:

• Energy consumption • Overview of cost per energy supplier• Building occupancy• Building usage• Overview of operational cost (by

section, building)• Bench mark data (property cost per sq.

metre, energy cost per sq metre)

The information management system optimises the decision

•Building management & investment decisions•Outsourcing strategies•Space allocation•Choice of suppliers•Implementation of demand response strategies

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Potential Energy Savings in Non-Residential Buildings

30%30%

US$

bn

Source: Energy Information Administration. “2003 CBECS Detailed Tables. Table C4A. Expenditures for Sum of Major Fuels for All Buildings, 2003.” December 2006. 1 June 2007 and “2002 Energy Consumption by Manufacturers--Data Tables. Table 7.9 Expenditures for Purchased Energy Sources, 2002.” 2002. 1 June 2007. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, ENERGY STAR program. “Useful Facts and Figures.” 1 June 2007.

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Barriers and drivers

Barriers

-No capital to invest in upgrades-Lack of awareness-Lack of knowledge / training-Outdated technology-Low penetration of advanced metering

Drivers

-Increasing awareness-Electricity cost anticipated to continue to increase-Political focus and increasing incentives-Deregulation in states and utilities-Increase in number of providers-Various options to avoid upfront cost

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Key Findings

• More building owners developing a closer relationship with their utility

• Senior individuals responsible for sustainability/energy are driving change

• Growing number of end-users negotiating deals for manual demand response

• Driver #1: Cheaper energy price incentives, Driver #2: desire for energy efficiency

• Limited roll-out of smart meters in non-residential buildings is a barrier

• More linking of disparate systems by middleware to have visibility and control

• Energy represents 20% of operating costs of more than half of all respondents

• 2-3 years pay back is general target on energy investments

• Owner-occupiers more inclined to invest and accept longer ROI

• Health, food sales and food service biggest opportunity by energy intensity

• Potential to save 30% of energy used in buildings

• Approx 20% of all non-residential buildings have a BMS today

• Office Buildings, Retail and Education represent biggest opportunity by total floor space

• "BMS sales due to Smart Grid" share of total BMS market in 2012 could reach 14%

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Growth of the Smart Grid Market in North America (US$bn)

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Engage your Customers

Source: Automated Logic Corp.

Source: Quality Automation Graphics

Examples of energy kiosks

Source: PG&E

Glowing Orb

Page 28: Impact of Smart Grids on Intelligent Buildings and Connected Cities Rawlson O’Neil King Communications Director Continental Automated Buildings Association.

Austin, Texas

Texas is in the unique position of having an entire power grid to itself, which makes starting pilot projects to move towards a smart grid a regulatory breeze compared with other regions. The Pecan Street Project is in Austin's Mueller neighborhood and received $10.4 million in stimulus funding for a smart grid project.

Top 10 Smart Grid Projects in North America

Page 29: Impact of Smart Grids on Intelligent Buildings and Connected Cities Rawlson O’Neil King Communications Director Continental Automated Buildings Association.

Boulder, Colorado

The SmartGridCity is the first fully functional smart-grid-enabled city in the world. Today, more than 16,000 smart meters are connected to the system.

Top 10 Smart Grid Projects in North America

Page 30: Impact of Smart Grids on Intelligent Buildings and Connected Cities Rawlson O’Neil King Communications Director Continental Automated Buildings Association.

Fort Collins, Colorado

A combined $11 million in federal, state, and local funding is helping to jump-start the FortZED. The goal is to turn the downtown into a net zero energy district that generates as much thermal and electric power as it uses.

Top 10 Smart Grid Projects in North America

Page 31: Impact of Smart Grids on Intelligent Buildings and Connected Cities Rawlson O’Neil King Communications Director Continental Automated Buildings Association.

Maui, Hawaii

The state is the most fossil-fuel dependent in the nation, which means Hawaiians are always looking for ways to maximize their power efficiency. The Smart Grid Integration Project involves several square miles of Maui fitted with smart meters. The feds picked up half the $14 million tab for the pilot project.

Top 10 Smart Grid Projects in North America

Page 32: Impact of Smart Grids on Intelligent Buildings and Connected Cities Rawlson O’Neil King Communications Director Continental Automated Buildings Association.

Sacramento, California

The Municipal Utility District has smart grid technology for some 600,000 homes and businesses using smart meters. If it stays on schedule, the power company should have meters in all homes and businesses by mid-2011.

Top 10 Smart Grid Projects in North America

Page 33: Impact of Smart Grids on Intelligent Buildings and Connected Cities Rawlson O’Neil King Communications Director Continental Automated Buildings Association.

San Diego, California

San Diego Gas & Electric was one of the first companies to partner with Google for the Internet search giants' SmartMeter initiative, which allows power users to connect their smart meters to the Internet and track their power usage. About 1.4 million smart meters have been installed around the region.

Top 10 Smart Grid Projects in North America

Page 34: Impact of Smart Grids on Intelligent Buildings and Connected Cities Rawlson O’Neil King Communications Director Continental Automated Buildings Association.

Tempe, Arizona

Arizona's Salt River Project is the third-largest public power utility in the United States and includes more than 330,000 smart meters. That number should triple in the next four years.

Top 10 Smart Grid Projects in North America

Page 35: Impact of Smart Grids on Intelligent Buildings and Connected Cities Rawlson O’Neil King Communications Director Continental Automated Buildings Association.

Toronto, Ontario

By year's end, 678,000 customers of Toronto Hydro will be experimenting with so-called Time of Use Tariffs, which charge customers different rates based on when they use the power grid, a critical goal of smart grid technology. It's designed to give customers incentives to make smarter power choices.

Top 10 Smart Grid Projects in North America

Page 36: Impact of Smart Grids on Intelligent Buildings and Connected Cities Rawlson O’Neil King Communications Director Continental Automated Buildings Association.

Washington, DC

The PowerCentsDC smart meter pilot project that ran until the fall of 2009 was so successful for about 900 customers in the nation's capital that the feds decided to increase funding. More than $45 million will go to towards this smart grid effort inside the beltway.

Top 10 Smart Grid Projects in North America

Page 37: Impact of Smart Grids on Intelligent Buildings and Connected Cities Rawlson O’Neil King Communications Director Continental Automated Buildings Association.

Worcester, Massachusetts

The $57 million Smart Grid pilot project in Worcester involves 15,000 customers around New England using smart meters, programmable thermostats, and e-billing for their power bills. If successful, company executives say, the technology could quickly spread to the entire Bay State.

Top 10 Smart Grid Projects in North America

Page 38: Impact of Smart Grids on Intelligent Buildings and Connected Cities Rawlson O’Neil King Communications Director Continental Automated Buildings Association.

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