TY - JOUR KW - Energy efficiency KW - Benchmarking KW - Energy analysis KW - Diagnostics KW - Anomaly detection KW - Baselining KW - Energy information system KW - Enterprise energy management KW - Performance monitoring KW - Web-based energy management and control system AU - Jessica Granderson AU - Mary Ann Piette AU - Girish Ghatikar AB -
Measured energy performance data are essential to national efforts to improve building efficiency, as evidenced in recent benchmarking mandates, and in a growing body of work that indicates the value of permanent monitoring and energy information feedback. This paper presents case studies of energy information systems (EIS) at four enterprises and university campuses, focusing on the attained energy savings, and successes and challenges in technology use and integration. EIS are broadly defined as performance monitoring software, data acquisition hardware, and communication systems to store, analyze, and display building energy information. Case investigations showed that the most common energy savings and instances of waste concerned scheduling errors, measurement and verification, and inefficient operations. Data quality is critical to effective EIS use, and is most challenging at the subsystem or component level, and with non-electric energy sources. Sophisticated prediction algorithms may not be well understood but can be applied quite effectively, and sites with custom benchmark models or metrics are more likely to perform analyses external to the EIS. Finally, resources and staffing were identified as a universal challenge, indicating a need to identify additional models of EIS use that extend beyond exclusive in-house use, to analysis services.
BT - Energy Efficiency C2 - LBNL-3701E C5 -Energy Information Systems
C6 -Commercial Building Systems
C7 -y
DA - 02/2011 DO - 10.1007/s12053-010-9084-4 ET - June 17, 2010 IS - 1 LA - eng N1 -Submitted - Feb. 20, 2010, Revised - Mar. 22, 2010, Accepted - May 15, 2010, Published online - June 16, 2010
N2 -Measured energy performance data are essential to national efforts to improve building efficiency, as evidenced in recent benchmarking mandates, and in a growing body of work that indicates the value of permanent monitoring and energy information feedback. This paper presents case studies of energy information systems (EIS) at four enterprises and university campuses, focusing on the attained energy savings, and successes and challenges in technology use and integration. EIS are broadly defined as performance monitoring software, data acquisition hardware, and communication systems to store, analyze, and display building energy information. Case investigations showed that the most common energy savings and instances of waste concerned scheduling errors, measurement and verification, and inefficient operations. Data quality is critical to effective EIS use, and is most challenging at the subsystem or component level, and with non-electric energy sources. Sophisticated prediction algorithms may not be well understood but can be applied quite effectively, and sites with custom benchmark models or metrics are more likely to perform analyses external to the EIS. Finally, resources and staffing were identified as a universal challenge, indicating a need to identify additional models of EIS use that extend beyond exclusive in-house use, to analysis services.
PB - Springer International Publishing PY - 2011 SP - 17 EP - 30 T2 - Energy Efficiency TI - Building Energy Information Systems: User Case Studies VL - 4 ER -