Demand Response and Energy Efficiency: “Killer” Smart Grid Applications

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Demand Response and Energy Efficiency: “Killer” Smart Grid Applications Rick Counihan, VP Regulatory Affairs January 20, 2010

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Demand Response and Energy Efficiency: “Killer” Smart Grid Applications. Rick Counihan, VP Regulatory Affairs. January 20, 2010. About EnerNOC. EnerNOC’s Demand Response Footprint. 3,250 MW under management, across more than 5,600 commercial/industrial sites* . * As of 9/30/2009. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Demand Response and Energy Efficiency: “Killer” Smart Grid Applications

Page 1: Demand Response and Energy Efficiency: “Killer” Smart Grid Applications

Demand Response and Energy Efficiency:“Killer” Smart Grid Applications

Rick Counihan, VP Regulatory Affairs

January 20, 2010

Page 2: Demand Response and Energy Efficiency: “Killer” Smart Grid Applications

About EnerNOC

•Over 3,250 MW under management, across more than 5,600 commercial/industrial sites (as of 9/30/09)

•Active in all DR programs in RTO/ISO regions

Market Leader in C&I Demand Response

•Diversified product suite of demand response and energy management solutions, including Monitoring-Based Commissioning (MBCx), Energy Supply Management, and Carbon Management

•Scalable technology platform – PowerTrak®Innovative Smart Grid Energy Management

Services for Businesses and Institutions

•Founded in 2001; •Publicly traded on NASDAQ (ENOC) since May 2007•2009 projected revenue: $187-189 million•Headquartered in Boston•400+ full-time employees

Strong Financial Track Record

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EnerNOC’s Demand Response Footprint3,250 MW under management, across more than 5,600 commercial/industrial sites*

* As of 9/30/2009

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The Energy Internet

Like the Internet, the Smart Grid has two layers.

Infrastructure Layer: Transmission lines, meters, communications protocols,

etc.

Application Layer: Functionality that extracts value from the underlying

infrastructure

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Why Demand Response?

50%

100%

Winter Spring Summer Fall

75%

90%

25%

Reduces peak demand and transmission and distribution congestionMitigates high wholesale market prices

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How Do Customers Participate?

Standby / Backup Generation Curtailment

Air handlers Anti-sweat heaters Chiller control Chilled water systems Defrost elements Elevators    Escalators External lighting External water features HVAC systems

Internal lighting Irrigation pumps Motors Outside signage Parking lot lighting Production equipment Processing lines Pool pumps / heaters Refrigeration systems Water heating

What Businesses and Institutions Curtail

Depending on customer needs and preferences, demand response plans can be automated through EnerNOC’s technology platform, or initiated manually at the site.

How It Works

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EnerNOC’s Network Operations CenterUtilities and grid operators benefit from the “smart grid” EnerNOC has built

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Energy Data from Every Customer

Capture Meter Data• At each site, the utility installs a KYZ pulse on the end-user meter, or an

EnerNOC field technician installs a current transformer. The ESS stores this usage data.

Send Meter Data• In real-time, each ESS transmits usage data to EnerNOC’s PowerTrak®

software platform via broadband or wireless connection.

Present Meter Data• Users have access to PowerTrak, online energy management software, that

presents EnerNOC consumption data and demand response performance in real-time

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The Mystery of the Chess Club or Using data and analytics to identify savings

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Monitoring-Based CommissioningSoftware-as-a-service platform that identifies 8-12 percent savings

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Rick CounihanVice President, Regulatory Affairs

EnerNOC, Inc. 500 Howard StreetSuite 400San Francisco, CA 94105Tel: 415.343.9504 [email protected]