Transcript Slide 1

Madison’s Sustainable Design and
Energy Committee:
Notes from Portland, Oregon
October 3, 2005
Challenge for a Sustainable City:
City Energy Use
• Energy costs scheduled to increase
• Identify, improve energy use in facilities
• ROI—must be a good investment,
payback
• Answer to many stakeholders
• Accounting, budgetary--Share the savings
with departments, OSD, general fund?
• Keep an eye on the big picture
What you get from energy efficiency
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Save energy, money
Walk the talk—show by example
Create, bolster a market for green business
Stakeholder participation
Greenhouse gas emissions
Energy use key component of sustainable city
principles
• Soft benefits—PR, productivity, morale
How to do Achieve Energy Efficient
City Facilities: Notes from Portland
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City energy policy 1979, updated 1990
Goal of improving energy efficiency 10%
City Energy Challenge 1991
Save $10 million from 1991-2001
Reduce total energy usage by 20%
$2.6 million in capital investment; IRR 25.7%
Avoid 115,000 metric tons of CO2 emissions
OSD Mission
• OSD’s mission is to provide leadership
and contribute practical solutions to
ensure a prosperous community where
people and nature thrive, now and in
the future.
• Through outreach, technical assistance, policy and
research, OSD promotes informed choices to
– Increase the use of renewable energy and resources
– Reduce solid waste and conserve energy and natural resources
– Prevent pollution and improve personal and community health
OSD Vision
• Our choices and actions create a healthy
and prosperous community where:
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Water and air are pure and clean
Land is productive and used in ecologically sound ways
Natural resources are used wisely
Energy is renewable
People, plants, salmon and other animals thrive in a healthy ecosystem
Rewarding work supports families
Neighborhoods are vibrant and green
People participate in community life as active, responsible citizens
Buildings are beautiful and efficient
Food is healthy, plentiful and accessible
Residents can easily walk, bicycle, carpool, or ride public transit as their first choice of
transportation
OSD Core Areas
• OSD has primary responsibility within the
City for setting the agenda and goals and
implements
 Solid waste
 Energy
 Greenhouse gases
 Food systems
• Other City agencies set the agenda and
goals, and OSD helps implement
 Water efficiency
 Stormwater
 Jobs
 Equity (e.g., affordable housing)
OSD Core Areas
• Other City agencies take the lead with minor
involvement from OSD
 Air quality
 Land use
 Contaminated land (brownfields)
 Parks/open space
 Transportation
City Energy Challenge:
How it Works
• OSD provides technical and financial
assistance to other city departments
• Assesses each bureau a fee for services
equal to 1% of energy budget ($15,000
cap)
• Departments are clients; beneficiaries
• Share energy cost savings to fund OSD
staff, return to departments, general fund
City Energy Challenge:
Services Provided by OSD
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Energy audit
Technical assistance
Financial assistance
Energy report
Staff training on energy and sustainability
Newsletter
Awards and recognition
City Energy Challenge:
Key Components
• Retrofit and controls in existing buildings
and other facilities and operations
• Design and technical assistance on new
construction
• Assess opportunities in operations:
transportation, maintenance, others
• Utility rate and green power negotiations
• Staff input and training
City Energy Challenge:
Examples
• Portland Building: Energy analysis
showed $67,000 annual energy savings
through lighting retrofits and controls
• New Construction—Portland LEED® for
city facilities, public financed private bldgs
• PV powered maintenance trucks
• Purchase green power from utility
How does City Energy Challenge fit
into the big picture?
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Hedge future energy cost increases
Basis for code, efficiency updates
Potential to achieve 20+% IRR
Cornerstone of Sustainable City Policy
Revenue source to fund OSD staff person
Share knowledge with other local govt’s
Lessons from Portland
• Identify energy savings goals
• Scan other cities approaches: Austin, TX;
Ann Arbor, MI, US Conf. of Mayors
• Evaluate Financing Alternatives: Bonds,
Grants, Leases, ESCO services, etc.
• Review engineering/metering opportunities
• Develop Green Teams for stakeholders
• Consider Inter-governmental cooperation
Lessons from Portland (cont’d)
• Interview key personnel (internal and
external)
• Develop appropriate delivery mechanism
• Assess renewable, green energy options
• Keep an eye on the big picture—how
energy fits into a sustainable city
(transportation, land use, local business,
etc.)
Additional Resources
• US Conference of Mayors: Selected Best
Practices for Successful City Energy
Initiatives, 2001
• Smart Communities Network: Creating
Energy Smart Communities Success
Stories
• Focus on Energy, Government Program
• MG&E, Energy Efficiency Program
Josh Arnold, J.D., M.B.A.
LEED® Accredited Professional
Manager, Sustainable Development
Franklin Energy
211 S. Paterson Street, Suite 200
Madison, Wisconsin 53703
608-310-6910
[email protected]