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California Energy Efficiency Retrofit Market Size Estimates, Alongside Solar and Demand Response Options Reference material for October 12, 2012 Governor’s.

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Presentation on theme: "California Energy Efficiency Retrofit Market Size Estimates, Alongside Solar and Demand Response Options Reference material for October 12, 2012 Governor’s."— Presentation transcript:

1 California Energy Efficiency Retrofit Market Size Estimates, Alongside Solar and Demand Response Options Reference material for October 12, 2012 Governor’s Office EE “Big Think” Forum

2 Energy Efficiency Expected total hardware investment 2009-2020: –$8-25 BILLION, varying widely across measures and situations –potential up to $70-80 Bil. with effective delivery solutions (see last slide for calculations and assumptions.) –Primary electric technologies targeted: Lighting Cooling “Plug Loads” & other process Commercial refrigeration Ancillary business services? Ties to: –green buildings and carbon footprint, –benchmarking & building ratings, –diagnostics and energy management systems, –metrics for occupant health & productivity. For More information: –http://www.cpuc.ca.gov/PUC/energy/Energy+Efficiency/http://www.cpuc.ca.gov/PUC/energy/Energy+Efficiency/ –CPUC’s lead EE management contacts: Simon Baker (programs), seb@cpuc.ca.gov Pete Skala (analysis), ska@cpuc.ca.gov

3 Integration of Demand Response, Advanced Metering Technology and “Smart Grid” IOU Goal: –Previous goal was 2700 MW peak reduction, ~ 5 large power plants. –Now market-based with DR at “top of resource loading order” with EE. IOU investment: –Electric hardware roll-out concluding; –SoCalGas $1 Bil AMI through 2015. –Results: 12 million electric meters, 10 million gas meters, distribution automation grid operations information Ancillary business services? $ TBD. Up to market & customer choice to determine: E nd-user technology & software applications for Home Area Networks and energy management. E.g.: –In-home displays (using real time data) –Programmable control functions / smart appliances –Data analytics, energy education –Energy management services –Storage technologies for load shifting For more information from CPUC’s lead management staff: Smart Grid: Liza Malashenko, elizaveta.malashenko@cpuc.ca.govelizaveta.malashenko@cpuc.ca.gov Demand Response: Bruce Kaneshiro, bsk@cpuc.ca.gov

4 Distributed Solar – California Solar Initiative IOU Goal: 1950 MW, ~ 4 large power plants –Statewide 3000 MW goal (including public utilities and CEC’s New Solar Homes Partnership) IOU CSI program spending expected 2007 - 2016: $2.3 BILLION Expected total hardware investment: > $12 BILLION For more information: –www.gosolarcalifornia.comwww.gosolarcalifornia.com –CPUC’s lead management: Melicia Charles, mvc@cpuc.ca.gov California Energy Commission has New Solar Homes Partnership –Goal of 400 MW of solar PV installed on new homes Ancillary business services? –Solar production metering & reporting: $13 million/year –Solar leasing and power purchase agreement finance transactions (now over 50% of residential market)

5 Other Clean Distributed Generation IOU “Self Generation Incentive Program” (SGIP) spending 2012-2016: $250 million Expected hardware investment 2012-2015: $900 million for 150 MW; more if market reaches grid parity Ancillary business services? –Fuel –Metering –Maintenance services For more information: –http://www.cpuc.ca.gov/PUC/energy/DistGen/sgip/http://www.cpuc.ca.gov/PUC/energy/DistGen/sgip/ –CPUC’s lead management: Melicia Charles, mvc@cpuc.ca.gov

6 From Harcourt Brown & Carey Study, Appendix B: California Building Energy Consumption and Cost Estimates (2011)


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