Now Is the Time for Energy Management
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Transcript of Now Is the Time for Energy Management
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11 N
ovem
ber 2
015 NOW IS THE TIME FOR ENERGY
MANAGEMENT
STEVE TARALLO, ENV-SP
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• New Paradigms in the Water Industry• Energy Use at Water Facilities• Opportunities• Select Industry Leaders• Industry Initiatives• Energy Management Planning Methodology• Q&A
AGENDA
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NEW PARADIGMS
• Resilience• Efficiency and Optimization• Expanded environmental
stewardship• Resource Recovery• Net Zero energy use• Life Cycle Thinking• Triple Bottom Line
Destination: “Utility of the Future”
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4Significant opportunities to not just reduce energy use, but to recover energy
• Public Water Supply• 1600-2,100 kWh/MG• 70-80% for Pumping
• Water Resource Recovery Facilities (WRRFs)• 800 - >5,500 kWh/MG• >85% at the plant
• Typically largest energy consumption for municipality
• Approx. 2% of U.S. power generation
ENERGY USE AT WATER FACILITIES
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STRATEGIC ENERGY MANAGEMENT FRAMEWORK
3 November 2011
Performance benchmark loop
Create a baseline of energy performance against which to measure improvements over time
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OPPORTUNITIES
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• Process Selection• Biggest opportunity for energy
efficiency and recovery• Carbon diversion
• Equipment Selection• Oversized = inefficient
• Peak Flow/Load Management• Reduce peak demands &
start/stops
DESIGN FOR ENERGY EFFICIENCY AND RELIABILITY
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OPERATING FOR ENERGY EFFICIENCY AND RELIABILITY
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• Operate Equipment Near Design Point
• Turn Off Excess Capacity• Maintain & Clean
Equipment
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AERATION SYSTEM ENERGY OPTIMIZATION
3 November 2011
• Blowers + Piping/Diffusers + Controls = ONE SYSTEM• High-efficiency diffusers
• Fine bubble; Ultra-fine bubble• High-efficiency blowers
• Single-stage, integrally-geared centrifugal• High-speed turbo gearless centrifugal
• Automatic DO/advanced control systems• Most Open Valve; SRT/DO; BNR simulation
Need all components to work together for overall system energy efficiency
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FINE BUBBLE DIFFUSER MAINTENANCE3 November 2011
0.2
0.3
0.4
0.5
0.6
0.7
0.8
or F
0.3
0.6
0.9
1.2
1.5
1.8
2.1
SOT
E / Z o
r FS
OTE /
Z (%/f
t)
N EW U S E D O LD
d iffuser age
1
2
3
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SOTE / Z or FSOTE / Z (%/m)
O R C LEA N ED (2-24 m o. inoperation)
(>24 m o. inoperation)
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CARBON DIVERSION
3 November 2011
Improving Primary Tmt.• 13% less oxygen demand (COD)
to aeration basin• 13% more COD to anaerobic
digestion to increase gas production
With CEPT• 36% less COD to aeration basin• >50% more COD to anaerobic
digestion to increase gas production
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ELECTRICAL INTENSITY (KWH/MG) FOR DIFFERENT TREATMENT LEVELS
3 November 2011
Typical Best-Practice ImprovementTrickling filter 1058 793 25%
Secondary tmt. 1412 973 31%
Nitrification 1934 1249 35%
BNR 2070 1241 40%ENR 1955 1202 39%
MBR 5676 2815 50%
Two-Sludge (A/B)
1981 1277 36%
(from WERF ENER1C12 Net Zero Energy Solutions for WRRFs)
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SELECT INDUSTRY LEADERS
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PHILADELPHIA WATER DEPT.
3 November 2011
• Utility-wide strategic energy plan commissioned in 2008/2009• Airport deicing fluid for
co-digestion/improved gas production• 250kWp solar installation• 1 million BTU/hr sewage geothermal
installation• 5.6MW biogas cogeneration facility• Innovative pilot tests and
demonstrations
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DC WATER
3 November 2011
• From R&D to Implementation• Thermal hydrolysis process (CAMBI)
for biogas augmentation• 14MW CHP facility• Sidestream short-cut nitrogen
removal• Cutting-edge research into
mainstream short-cut nitrogen removal
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ITHACA, NY
3 November 2011
• High-strength waste processing facility• Additional revenue streams (FOG,
dairy waste, other sludges and high-strength wastes
• Generating approx. 100,000 kWh/month from biogas (4x65 MW microturbines)
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INDUSTRY INITIATIVES – TECHNOLOGYWERF ENERGY RESEARCH
LIFT PROGRAM
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WERF ENERGY RESEARCH
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19Tools to help utilities develop their technology roadmap towards net zero energy use
WERF ENER1C12 – NET ZERO ENERGY SOLUTIONS FOR WATER RESOURCE RECOVERY FACILITIES
Objective: Provide research to develop new approaches that will allow water resource recovery facilities to be energy neutral, and thus able to operate solely on the energy embedded in the water and wastes they treat.
(from WERF Energy Management Challenge Exploratory Team Report, January 2011)
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3 November 2011
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ENERGY FLOW (SANKEY) DIAGRAMS FOR >50 WRRF CONFIGURATIONS
3 November 2011
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WERF PROJECT MODELED INNOVATIVE ENERGY EFFICIENCY AND RESOURCE RECOVERY TECHNOLOGIES
3 November 2011
Best Practice Configuration
Innovative Technologie
s
Model high-Performance Facilities
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3 November 2011
LIFT is a WERF-WEF program that accelerates water technology demand and adoption and engages the entire water sector in all phases of the innovation process
Greater collaboration leads to faster adoption
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ENERGY MASTER PLANNINGMETHODOLOGY
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• Demand Management• Energy efficiency• Load shifting/shedding• Improve power factor
• Supply Management• Imported organic waste• Renewable energy• Combined Heat and Power
12 AM 7 AM 6 PM 12 AM
$15.00
$10.00
$5.00
0
Dem
and
Cos
t $ p
er k
W
Summer Winter
1 PM 8 PM
ENERGY PLANS OFTEN INCLUDE A PORTFOLIO OF DEMAND AND SUPPLY SIDE MEASURES
Combination of no CAPEX, low CAPEX, and high CAPEX measures. Holistic, integrated analysis.
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Discretionary energy projects involve a wider set of stakeholders and less certainty of costs and benefits 26
BUSINESS CASE EVALUATIONS
Decision
Decision
• Internal• Financial (20-yr NPV)• Costs and Benefits
easier to measure
TraditionalCompliance; Capacity
• Internal & External• Triple Bottom Line• Costs and Benefits
more difficult to measure
Energy projectsDiscretionary
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HOLISTIC ENERGY EFFICIENCY RECOVERY PLAN APPROACH MAXIMIZES VALUE
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OrganizationalInitiatives, KPIs
Energy RateProjections
Energy RateAnalysis
Energy Master Plan
Ener
gy D
ecisi
on C
ash
Flow
Mod
elBenchmarking &System Eff. Review
Tech. EvaluationsProcessMechanicalElectrical/Gas
Renewable EnergyAlternatives
EvaluationsBiogas UtilizationThermal EnergySolar and Other
Business Case EvaluationsProject Screening & Prioritization
Projected EnergyDemand Profile
AlternativeDemand Profile
Project Initiation /Visioning and GoalsWorkshop
ProgressWorkshops
Capital Projects
TECHNOLOGY ROADMAP
Best Practices & Operations
Energy Management Dashboard
Performance Management
Strategy Technical Business
Portfolio of projects toimplement over time
Informed decision-makingthat mitigates risk
Alignment withUtility’s Vision
TBL
& B
CE P
roce
ss
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Energy RateProjections
CashFlowModel
Projected EnergyDemand Profile
AlternativeDemand Profile
A S S E S S E N E R G Y E F F I C I E N C Y A N D R E S O U R C E R E C O V E R Y P R O J E C T S O N A P O R T F O L I O B A S I S
O P T I M I Z E D E N E R G Y P R O J E C T C I P T H R O U G H R I S K - B A S E D P R O J E C T I M P L E M E N TAT I O N S C H E D U L E S
P L A N N I N G C R I T E R I A T H AT I S I N L I N E W I T H S T R AT E G I C O B J E C T I V E S O F T H E U T I L I T Y
FA C I L I TAT E S B U S I N E S S C A S E D E V E L O P M E N T F O R D I S C R E T I O N A R Y E N E R G Y P R O J E C T S
ENERGY DECISION CASH FLOW MODEL
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ENERGY PROJECT PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT
3 November 2011
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CONCLUSION
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• The value of energy efficiency and resource recovery is becoming widely recognized
• Energy efficiency and recovery projects can result in significant cost savings, but can also require significant capital investment• It is important to make a sound Business Case
• To date, most utilities have taken a fragmentary approach (isolated projects) to energy management.
• To extract sustained value from energy management, an integrated project portfolio approach is beneficial
• Numerous tools, manuals, research reports are available to help guide you towards achieving your energy management objectives
IN CONCLUSION
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THANK YOU!
QUESTIONS?
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• Shift to value based management• Value vs. cost
• Revenue generation vs. regulatory compliance alone or cost savings alone
• Risk• Higher risk acceptance
• Stakeholders• More of them• More diverse
• Opportunity identification / Innovation
STRATEGIC CHALLENGES
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• Culture• Key Performance Indicators / Incentives
• Energy efficiency (e.g. kWh or MMBTU per MG
• Net Present Value• Business Partners
• Buyer / Seller• Alternative delivery (e.g. Energy
Performance Contracting)• Business Process realignment• Training of O&M personnel
ORGANIZATIONAL CHALLENGES
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• Maximize utilization of existing assets• Process “fit”• Alignment with Asset Management
• “New” technologies• Pilot studies• Demonstrations• WERF LIFT program
• Technology Roadmap• Set future course• Phased implementation towards achieving
a future performance goal (e.g. “net zero energy use”)
TECHNOLOGICAL CHALLENGES
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FINANCIAL CHALLENGES
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• Discretionary spending• Competition for limited capital funds
• Volatile Energy market conditions• Will low natural gas prices continue?• Strong dependence on energy policy /
strategic directions in the energy industry
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INDUSTRY INITIATIVES – PLANNINGWEF ENERGY ROADMAP
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SIX TOPICSTHREE LEVELS OF PROGRESSION
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PRIORITIZE EFFORTS BASED ON IMPORTANCE AND CURRENT LEVEL OF ACHIEVEMENT
Highest Priority
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MOST SIGNIFICANT SUSTAINABILITY ISSUES
3 November 2011
Maintaining or expanding asset life
Customer water rates
Long-term financial viability
Energy efficiency
Maintaining service with declining budgets
Reducing sanitary sewer overflows
Distribution system water loss
Energy recovery/generation
Chemical use
58.7%
34.2%
39.1%
26.4%
30.4%
25.8%
8.2%
12.2%
7.1%
53.2%
31.8%
31.3%
27.1%
21.9%
18.4%
15.7%
11.2%
9.7%
Trends: 2014 and 2015
20152014
Source: 2015 Strategic Directions: U.S Water Industry Report (Black & Veatch)