David E. Rodgers, DOE: Prioritization of Energy Efficiency
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Transcript of David E. Rodgers, DOE: Prioritization of Energy Efficiency
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Prioritization of Energy Efficiency
Alliance to Save Energy
International Policy Leaders Dialogue
David Rodgers
Deputy Assistant Secretary of Energy Efficiency
U.S. Department of Energy
September 25, 2008
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The Role of Energy Efficiency
Energy efficiency is the fastest, lowest risk, most economical way to address climate and security concerns
Energy efficiency means competitiveness for the U.S. economy
Market-ready today at attractive rates of return with enormous unexploited potential
Energy efficiency represents investments in energy not consumed, which mitigates risks associated with future price uncertainties.
Robust and evolving pipeline of efficiency technologiesMcKinsey Global Institute identified energy saving sufficient to cut consumption growth in half using only existing technologies that offer at least a 10% IRR (MGI, Curbing Global Energy Demand Growth, May 2007)
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Efficiency: Carbon Abatement with a Positive Return on Investment
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90
95
100
105
110
115
120
125
130
2005
2015
2025
En
erg
y C
on
sum
pti
on
(Q
uad
s)
Energy Efficiency Has the Technical Potential to Level U.S. Energy Demand Growth
Buildings
Industry
Transportation
• Super Boilers• Nano Mfg• Direct
Steelmaking• Efficient Data
Centers• CHP
EIA (Pre-EISA) Business as Usual Projected Demand
Growth
EIA (Pre-EISA) Business as Usual Projected Demand
Growth
• Hybrids• Advanced
Diesels• PHEVs• Lightweight
Materials
Source: DOE Scenario Projections
2030 Tech.
Potential Savings
18 Quads
2030 Tech.
Potential Savings
18 Quads
2015 Tech.
Potential Savings 3 Quads
2015 Tech.
Potential Savings 3 Quads
2020 Tech.
Potential Savings 8 Quads
2020 Tech.
Potential Savings 8 Quads
EISA
EIA (Post-EISA) Business as Usual Projected Demand
Growth
EIA (Post-EISA) Business as Usual Projected Demand
Growth
• Lighting• Envelope• ZEBs• Appliances• Codes
• CAFE• RFS• Appliance, Bldg, Industrial Motor EE
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0
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203
0
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Yet Non-market Forces Impede Energy Efficiency Market Penetration
Dislocated Agency
Inconsistent Real Estate Valuation
Inconsistent use of Life cycle costing
Deficit of Information
Lack of Aggregation
Misperceptions by Consumers
Out of Date Utility regulation
Inconsistant policies (e.g., Codes)
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U.S. Department of Energy Strategic Priorities for Energy Efficiency
Priorities
Utility Efficiency
Advanced Model Building Codes
Appliance Standards, Advanced Lighting Advocacy, and ENERGY STAR
Energy Efficient Buildings
Industrial Efficiency
Vehicle Efficiency
Creating a National Energy Efficiency Ethic
Accelerated R&D
Recent Accomplishments
National Action Plan for Energy Efficiency
Department of Energy 30% Vision
Commercial Buildings Initiative & Builders Challenge
Save Energy Now
Energy Independence and Security Act Fuel Economy Improvement
Disney and Ad Council Collaborations
Advanced Energy Initiative
International Partnership for Energy Efficiency Cooperation (IPEEC)
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Appliance Standards, Advanced Lighting Advocacy, and ENERGY STAR
Modernizing ENERGY STAR
• Update and expand the ENERGY STAR program to add new advanced technologies to the ENERGY STAR portfolio.
Added or Updated since 2006: Clothes washer Advanced water heaters (5 categories)
Dishwashers Solid State Lighting (7 categories)
Refrigerators Expanded CFL categories• Develop deployment plans for marketing advanced technologies to consumers. • Talk to market stakeholders, gather information about market conditions, and develop strategies for building product availability and demand.
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Energy Efficient Buildings
• Builders Challenge
Recognizing Leadership in Homebuilding
• Commercial Buildings Initiative
Public-private partnerships working to enable market-ready net-zero energy commercial buildings no later than 2025 in all climate zones
Commercial Building Energy Alliances EnergySmart Hospitals EnergySmart Schools
55% of U.S. Natural Gas55% of U.S. Natural Gas
72% of U.S. Electricity72% of U.S. Electricity
The combined residential and commercial buildings sector is the largest energy consumer in the U.S.
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International Partnership for Energy Efficiency Cooperation (IPEEC)
In coordination with other leading countries, DOE is working to establish IPEEC - a high-level forum for discussion, consultation and information exchange.
IPEEC will advance global energy efficiency by facilitating actions that yield high energy efficiency gains
Countries will join on a voluntary basis and participate in specific annexes that reflect each country’s greatest interest
• Effective policies• Best practices• Building codes• Product standards
• Financial mechanisms• Public procurement• Civic infrastructure and fleets• Consumer/stakeholder education• Measurement/verification protocols
ScopeDevelop public-private partnerships
Facilitate international trade of efficient products
Support participating countries’ efficiency efforts & exchange information on:
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International Partnership for Energy Efficiency Cooperation (IPEEC)
Potential Annex Topics
1. Technology Development, Transfer, and Deployment2. Performance and Evaluation Methodology 3. National Efficiency Policy Options4. Test Procedures & Standards5. Energy Management Systems6. Public Sector Efficiency7. Public Transportation 8. Appliance Standards9. Industrial Efficiency 10. Advanced Lighting
Executive Committee
= member countries
Annex I Annex II Annex III