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Objectives Analysis tools for determining cost and cost- effectiveness.

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Presentation on theme: "Objectives Analysis tools for determining cost and cost- effectiveness."— Presentation transcript:

1 Objectives Analysis tools for determining cost and cost- effectiveness

2 Cost energy efficiency and renewables What is the appropriate cost of energy? Huge variation nationally Depends on customer Depends on sector Energy Transmission Distribution Fuel

3 How much do you pay for electricity? 0.0177 $/kWh 0.0355 $/kWh 0.0532 $/kWh 0.1169 $/kWh Depends on how much I use Depends on what time of year

4 Rate (E01): Winter Billing Months November through April Summer Billing Months May through October Customer Charge $6.00 Energy Rate (E01) 3.55¢ per kWh, first 500 kWh 6.02¢ per kWh, for all kWh over 500 kWh 7.82¢ per kWh, over 500 kWh Fuel Adjustment Clause (FAC)Fuel Adjustment Clause (FAC) - plus an adjustment for variable costs, calculated according to the Fuel Adjustment Clause Tariff, multiplied by all kWh.adjustment

5 Primary Service (For Rates: E01, E02, E03, E04, E05, E06, E10, E13, E14, E23, ENW) January 1999 - July 2000$ 0.01372 August 2000 - October 2000$ 0.01635 November 2000 - January 2001$ 0.02211 February 2001 - December 2001$ 0.02682 January 2002 - June 2003$ 0.01774 July 2003 - October 2003$ 0.02004 November 1, 2003 - December 31, 2003 $ 0.02265 For electric bills received beginning January 1, 2004 $ 0.02796

6 Which state has the highest residential electricity rate? What determines this? Why are there large discrepancies? What are differences between utilities? What is deregulation?

7 Electricity Restructuring (Feb. 2003) http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/electricity/chg_str/regmap.htmlhttp://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/electricity/chg_str/regmap.html (Feb. 2003)

8 What should you pay for electricity?pay for electricity http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/electricity/page/fact_sheets/retailprice.html

9 What should you pay for electricity? Is electricity cheaper or more expensive in Austin than in the rest of the world? 2002 numbers Nuclear ($0.10/kWh) Gas ($0.03/kWh) Coal ($0.05/kWh)

10 What about natural gas? How is natural gas sold? What does it cost? http://www.eia.doe.gov/pub/oil_gas/natural_ga s/data_publications/natural_gas_monthly/curre nt/pdf/table_21.pdfhttp://www.eia.doe.gov/pub/oil_gas/natural_ga s/data_publications/natural_gas_monthly/curre nt/pdf/table_21.pdf ~1000 BTU/ft 3 ft 3 = cf, ccf = 100 ccf = 1therm

11 What does gas cost in Austin? Austin $0.78/ccf (March 2003) Austin $1.82/ccf (March 2004) or $0.24/ccf Gas prices rose 43% February to March 2003 Gas market is heavily influenced by electricity market Gas market is more subject to manipulation

12 Question 1 How much cheaper is it to heat with a gas furnace than a electric resistance furnace? Other issues Fan (adds heat at electricity rate) Pilot light (0.2 therm/day) Safety Equipment cost Maintenance

13 Austin Energy Code Requirements Glazing percent of gross wall area:15%18%20%25% Exterior wallsR-13 Floors over unconditioned spaceR-11 R-13 Attics and knee wallsR-26R-30 Glazing U-factor (max)0.750.650.600.52

14 Question 2 What is the cost/benefit of insulating my house with R-19 instead of R-13? 1150 ft 2 of wall area 0.76 $/ft 2 for R-13 1.70 $/ft 2 for R-19 How much does the answer change if I had gas heat?

15 Question 2 Issues How do we figure out how much heat I need? Weather data (what is relevant data?) Bill analysis (statistics) Modeling/simulation

16 Question 3 ECJ 9.236 delamp from four 40W fluorescent tubes to two 34W tubes Cost/fixture is $100 Assume constant ballast factor What is cost/benefit?

17 Question 3 issues What is cost of electricity? http://www.austinenergy.com/rates/large- primary.htmlhttp://www.austinenergy.com/rates/large- primary.html How do you figure out savings from reduced cooling? How long are lights on? What other costs are important?

18 Question 4 How much does sealing and/or insulating heating and cooling ducts save? Cost varies considerably ~Small homes, $350/home We are interested in the system efficiency Overall impact of ducts

19 Duct System efficiency

20 Site T08, Eugene OR Efficiency went from ~ 40% to around 80% Electric resistance furnace Electricity was $0.05/kWh How would we figure out how much we would save?

21 Efficiency program evaluation Apply savings from a particular measure to a large number of buildings Assume statistical averages for population and building evaluation Can be significant deviation Almost always overpredict savings Need to measure savings

22 Reminder: Cost of renewables FuelCost US¢/kWh Solar30 Wave9 Biomass6 Wind5

23 How much does conservation cost? Who is paying for it? How long does a measure last? What else can you do with the money? How valuable is reducing pollution? What common myths are out there?common myths For duct sealing project shown above – cost was about 0.005 $/kWh

24 Savings Costs and benefits are tractable Often not obvious Require analysis and consideration of factors removed from actual issue Consider non-economic benefits LEED Cost per point debate


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