Disney, Hines and Toyota connect
knowledge and power.
Energy metering and monitoring programs can
make a significant difference in a company’s
bottom line. Energy costs are a major
component in most business budgets, yet many
facility executives are not aware of the
intricacies of energy expenditures within their
facilities.
“The first step in improving energy
management is measuring how, where and
when you use all that energy,” says Jean
Lupinacci, director of the Commercial and
Industrial Branch of Energy Star® at the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
While metering alone does not save energy, the
information from the meters, when acted on, can
result in significant reductions —typically 5 to
15 percent, Lupinacci says.
“A company, at the least, needs to track and
compile how much energy each property uses”,
Lupinacci says. “At multi-building sites, we
recommend metering at a building level rather
than using one meter for the whole property.”
Once metering information is available, the
facility executive can compare costs per square
foot against similarly designed and used
buildings. That information can provide a
general sense of whether energy costs at a
particular building are higher than average. If
so, that building may well be a good place to
look for energy-saving opportunities.
Some companies have an in-house staff with the
skills to handle measuring and monitoring and
to produce a full array of useful reports.
Alternatively, there are consulting or partnering
services that, for a fee, offer a range of energy
information services, including monitoring a
diversity of building data and, in some cases,
generating facility management and executive
level reports from that data.
At Walt Disney World, energy measuring and
monitoring is handled in-house. The company’s
current energy-saving program began in August
1996. The Walt Disney World Company
became a partner in EPA’s Energy Star
Buildings program and used that program as a
framework and methodology for energy
savings. Since then, Disney has implemented
numerous projects that have resulted in
significant energy and cost savings, says Paul
Allen, chief engineer, energy management,
Reedy Creek Energy Services, Walt Disney
World.
Where to Start
The starting point was lighting upgrades. By
December 1998, more than 17 million square
feet of facilities were upgraded under the Green
Lights phase of the Energy Star Buildings
program. The annual electrical savings
amounted to 46 million kilowatt-hours — the
equivalent electrical usage at Disney’s Animal
Kingdom Theme Park during its first year of
operation, says Allen.
Next, for the building tune-up (BTU) phase of
its energy efforts, Disney created a systematic
process to evaluate building systems and to
measure their utility usage. An intranet-based
utility reporting system was developed in 1997
to publish utility metering data and track results
of the company’s energy-saving efforts. The
reporting system gave authorized employees
access to specific types of data. Timely and
informative reports on utility usage at each
facility helped minimize costs. “BTU Teams,”
formed from engineering and operations staff,
reviewed building and energy management
systems. This systematic approach typically
resulted in 5- to 15-percent reductions in utility
usage in the facilities reviewed to date, says
Allen.
Savings Add up
In October 1998, Disney began implementing
numerous cost-effective energy saving
projects, including compressed air system
optimization; hot water boiler controls;
variable speed drives; demand ventilation
control; energy management system upgrades;
and utility sub-metering systems.
All the Energy Star Buildings Program efforts
at Disney have resulted in a 44-percent internal
rate of return (IRR) and annual reductions of
approximately 94 million kwh of electricity
and 578,000 therms of natural gas.
Today, Disney uses its own customized Web-based
system to monitor energy usage. “We
monitor the monthly billing totals for electric,
chilled water, hot water, natural gas, water,
sewer, refuse and reclaimed water,” says
Allen. “We also collect hourly data from
various types of meters on all electric use and
some chilled water, hot water, water and
natural gas usage.” Almost all the data is
entered into the system automatically, with
minimal manual entry required when updating
monthly billing data, he says.
The collected energy data is stored on a central
computer. Everyone responsible for energy
usage gets a monthly e-mail report showing a
current-month vs. year-ago month comparison,
Allen says. A smaller number get a daily e-mail
report showing utility usage by each day.
“Continuous feedback on utility performance
is central to an energy information system,”
says Allen. At Disney, the energy information
system consists of data-collecting equipment
and computer programs that provide raw data
on energy use throughout the enterprise and
enable personnel to target areas ripe for energy
conservation.
Hines, a Houston-based international real
estate company with 650 properties in 76 U.S.
cities and 13 foreign countries, totaling 87
million gross square feet, has also seen the
benefits of energy metering. The company has
54 Energy Star-labeled buildings.
“We monitor the energy performance of
equipment in the HVAC system, including
chillers, fans, pumps, and the cooling tower, and
compare performance to their design intent,”
says Andrew Kitchens, senior manager of
engineering. In the electrical system, the
company profiles the load characteristics for the
building by placing meters on distribution
panels, and in a number of buildings, on bus-risers.
In some situations, Hines is monitoring
floor-by-floor loads.
“We maintain a utility variance report that
identifies our BTU’s (British Thermal Units)
per square foot,” says Kitchens. “With historical
data entered, the report compares each month’s
energy use to a five-year average for that month.
We can see trends or anomalies in energy use,
and if the variance is greater than 5 percent, we
require our engineering managers to provide an
explanation.”
When Hines acquires a property, the energy-use
variance usually becomes favorable over time,
the result of a combination of tuning up the
building and other energy efficiency measures,
Kitchens says.
“Generally, after an initial assessment of an
acquisition, we tune up the building by applying
whatever measures are needed, as appropriate,
to return it to design intent. That alone can
sometimes net 5 percent to 10 percent energy
savings,” Kitchens says. “Some typical
conditions we find include air side economizers
that are not functioning properly, the need for
air/water balancing, equipment utilization issues
(sequencing, cycling, scheduling), and the
general lack of automated energy management
employment, including optimal system start-up
and shut-down features.
“We also look for other immediate savings
achievable from slam-dunk efficiency measures,
such as lighting retrofits, high-efficiency motors
and minor control upgrades,” Kitchens says.
Information Is Key
The measuring and monitoring information
from the utility variance report goes to Central
Engineering at Hines. The company generates
central monthly reports on consumption and
costs for all utilities. Each property, on an
annual basis, also gets printouts for all the
other properties, for comparison.
The information, all of which Kitchens
considers valuable, is reviewed during an
annual assessment visitation process of each
property that covers several areas of
engineering operation, including energy
management. “We question or congratulate the
engineering manager on energy management,
as warranted,” he says.
“Another important aspect of the annual
meeting is ensuring that building management
is up to date on the latest technologies,
whether analyzed in house or by partnering
with an ESCO, a consultant, a utility
representative, a contractor or a vendor,”
Kitchens says. The engineering manager’s
ability to identify, sell, implement and monitor
energy efficiency measures is a critical skill-set
for Hines. “We encourage and expect
building engineers to take broad responsibility
for the management of energy for their
building.”
Hines developed the utility variance report as a
pilot program in the Western region, made
necessary changes, and brought the program
corporate wide.
Facility executives who are considering a
similar program should allow enough time for
facility personnel to understand, embrace and
implement software programs — such as
Excel. “There was a longer learning curve than
we anticipated,” Kitchens says. He also
advises facility executives to keep it simple.
“Carefully identify only the energy data that
you know you’re going to use, and from which
you can effect change.”
No-cost Solutions
At Toyota Motor Sales, U.S.A., Inc. —
Toyota’s sales and marketing organization for
much of North America — a pilot program
consisting of a metering and monitoring
system and a building management system,
both of which are modified off-the-shelf
solutions, has been in place at seven locations
around the country for almost a year. The sites
include the 17-building headquarters campus,
parts distribution centers, regional sales offices
and vehicle delivery centers. All the
information is transmitted to Toyota’s
partnering service provider in Chicago.
“The service provider takes the raw data and
develops reports and analyses that are
available, company wide, over the Web within
5 to 10 minutes after the remote metering,”
says Jim Cooke, national facilities operations
manager for Toyota Motor Sales, USA. The
monitoring is conducted on a building-by-building
basis, with one reading device for
both direct electrical and HVAC power usage
at each building.
The data already has been useful. For example,
there were spikes in electric use at certain
times of the day at the warehouses because
fork lifts were all being recharged at the same
time. Varying the recharging schedule has
reduced the peak loads.
“We have an open goal to substantially reduce
our energy expenditure over the next several
years,” Cooke says. “Since we started the
program, from better management alone —
without changing any energy-using equipment
— we have been able to reduce our energy
usage by about 6 percent.”
Toyota is taking one step at a time. Before
deciding on any equipment retrofits, the
company wants to understand and optimize
benefits of better management to see if
equipment replacement is warranted.
“In the next six to 12 months, we will start
pilot programs on changing lighting and other
systems to test theories and make sure the
results are in our favor,” says Cooke. “We will
make adjustments, if needed, before we
expand the program to all our sites.”
Cooke advises working with third-party partners
who are cooperative and willing to customize
their solution to meet company needs. Plus, for
best results from the effort, he recommends,
“employing people who are totally focused on
— and dedicate 100 percent of their time to —
the energy management program.”
First published March 2003