The
 cost savings benefits of interval data for main utility meters and 
submeters for specific loads (e.g. lighting, refrigeration), work areas 
(e.g. welding), or equipment (e.g. electric furnace) are well understood
 by energy and facility managers.  Energy data from utility bills are 
"rear view mirror" snapshots of energy use and typically received 30-60 
days after use. Interval data provides operators a view of what is 
happening now and thus 
affords an opportunity to make changes that optimize energy usage. But 
with submeter generating lots of interval data (typically every 15 
minutes), who has time to review and analyze all this data?
The
 primary function of the typically thinly-staffed energy and facility 
teams is operational reliability (keeping the line running or building 
operating) and maintenance (break-fix). It takes time to normalize the 
submeter data for weather, occupancy, production levels and other 
factors to identify true energy use anomalies (miscalibrated equipment, 
equipment needless running, etc.). This is time these teams often do not
 have. For example, one Fortune 500 firm has dozens and dozens of 
submeters across 3 large manufacturing facilities but the energy team 
simply did not have the time to analyze the data.
Compounding
 this time challenge is missing incentives for operational 
improvements.   Many teams (like the team mentioned above) are rewarded 
for reliability and occupancy comfort and not energy efficiency. In 
other words, there is little upside to driving energy savings through 
behavior change or equipment calibration (one may even argue there is 
downsize because chasing energy efficiency improvements takes time away 
from reliability or comfort goals).
In our research report
 on energy management software that profiles 45 vendors, we noticed that
 many software packages simply display submetered data or offer 
simplistic algorithms to normalize the data. These time-started teams 
need more than graphical displays of data.
The
 good news is that innovative solutions are coming to the market. In 
part 2, we'll summarize some solutions that leverage the power of 
submetered data with the reality of time-starved operational teams. 
These solutions involve the generation of proposed work orders, the 
remote control of assets or equipment, and other capabilities.
What are your views on this?

 
 
4 comments:
Nice article, thanks for the information.
Hi Paul
Agreed this is a major issue. We have automated a large proportion of the analyses that are useful. But ultimately it is the tools to triage the findings and draw attention to most need that show most interest. Multi-site enterprises like coffee-shops, banks and retailers need to save on travel costs so remote diagnostics are of huge benefit.
We are also seeing increasing leves of interest from Utilities who are more profitable offering services than simply selling low margin commodities in deregulated environments.
Hi Paul
Aaah.... the world of sub-metering :-) I've been swimming in that sea for most of my life. Comments like "how much does a submeter save me?" are always amusing. I find most sub-metering rollouts of any size (i.e. 1000 to +100,000 for a single client) that are directly linked to value (i.e. getting savings out of the data) are often found in large global organisations like Retailers, Telecoms, Banks etc. Often look to maturer EIS markets like UK for best solutions for both metering hardware and action orientated analytics software.
I found you through the Facebook thing on the Drudge. I read many of your blog posts and I know this is going to be tough for you, but you are smart and not-smart all at the same time.
When I have more time I will come back and give you details on why you are a bit misguided.
Just a hint a what is to come - Sustainability is for idiots.
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