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March 30, 2010 Michael Kelleher SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry Energy Use, Renewable Energy and SUNY ESF Climate Action Plan.

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Presentation on theme: "March 30, 2010 Michael Kelleher SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry Energy Use, Renewable Energy and SUNY ESF Climate Action Plan."— Presentation transcript:

1 March 30, 2010 Michael Kelleher SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry Energy Use, Renewable Energy and SUNY ESF Climate Action Plan

2 Exajoules

3 (J.R. Fisher, 2005)

4 121400 Energy Projections: “Global Energy Perspectives” ITASA / WEC Population Projections: United Nations “Long-Range World Population Projections: Based on the 1998 Revision” 0 2 4 6 8 200020502100 0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200 Population (Billions) Energy Consumption (Qbtu / yr) World Population World Energy Consumption 19501900 Population of Industrialized Countries 10 Year (J.R. Fisher, 2005)

5 For every 100 BTUs of energy supplied, 44 BTUs are consumed, and 56 BTUs are “lost” due to inefficiencies (primarily combustion)

6 About Half of States Have Renewable Portfolio Standards (RPS) and Renewables Mandates, 2007

7 Cost Comparison Lazard: Levelized Cost Of Energy Analysis Version 2.0 June 2008

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10 Willow Biomass Production Cycle Three-year old after coppice One-year old after coppice Coppice First year growth Site Preparation Planting Early spring after coppicing Harvesting

11 Willow Biomass Crop Carbon Cycles (Mann and Spath 1997, Heller et al. 2003) 100 % Carbon Closure (Assumes 0.25 t/ha-yr increase in soil carbon) Net CO 2 Emissions: 0% Power Plant Construction (26%) Transportation (12%) Feedstock Production (62%) 55 J 11-16 J 1 J

12 ESF Energy Inputs * - 2007 * reflects energy use factors

13 1. Energy Conservation Measures - energy saving renovations, technologies, & facilities upgrades. 2. Alternative Energy Projects - onsite clean & renewable energy projects to power existing structures. 3. Green-Building Energy Systems - design of new construction with integrated renewable energy systems. Ultra efficient building envelopes allow surplus energy to flow to other buildings. 4. Campus Action Campaigns - efforts by ESF community for increased awareness, voluntary behavioral adjustments, policy changes, reduced waste, etc. 5. Forest Carbon Sequestration - designation & management of select ESF forest properties for carbon sequestration & storage purposes. Five-Fold Path Energy & Emissions Reduction Total: 40 Initiatives

14  $1.2M chiller replacement saves ESF $170,000/yr and reduce annual oil consumption by 2,500 barrels/yr  Thermostat settings, reduced in winter & increased in summer. (very cold over winter break)  Turn off the lights and computers!  NYPA financed energy audits and efficiency improvements. Conservation = efficiency /

15 ~80% Conversion efficiency 17% of campus electrical requirements Funded by Grants: NYSERDA US DOE EPRI ~$1.5M Fuel Cell, Efficient Power and Heat Generation

16  40 KW of installed ($400,000)  $200,000 funded by NYSERDA

17 New “zero net energy” showcase building for campus. Design includes biomass combined heat and power, PV, green roof, passive solar and rain gardens. Gateway building – LEED Platinum

18 Gateway Building Energy Efficiency

19  8,000 MBtu CHP Wood Pellet Steam Boiler  8,000 MBtu CHP Natural Gas Boiler  200 kW Back-pressure steam turbine  30 kW CHP Biodiesel Micro-turbine  Dual 65 kW CHP Natural Gas Micro-turbines  150-200 kW Solar PV array Gateway Energy System

20  CHP System is a 25% improvement to overall energy efficiency ◦ Provides 75% of campus thermal needs and 20% of campus electrical needs.  Offset 54,000 MMBTU Fossil Fuels Annually ◦ 18,000 MMBTU from efficiency improvements ◦ 36,000 MMBTU from fuel switching improvement  System is projected to save ESF $450,000 annually, and provides a $1.5 million NPV over 15 years Combined Heat and Power System

21 Carbon Cost Efficiency

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