Date post: | 20-Dec-2015 |
Category: |
Documents |
View: | 214 times |
Download: | 0 times |
www.energync.net
State Energy OfficeNC Department of Administration
Energy and Environmental Initiatives in North Carolina –
Accelerating Change
Bob LekerRenewables Program Manager
EPA Sustainable Energy Conference 12/07
www.energync.net
State Energy OfficeNC Department of Administration
North Carolina
• 23rd Largest Emitter of Greenhouse Gases
• New coal and nuclear plants proposed
• Transportation fuel use slated to rise fast
• NCUC dockets on energy efficiency, coal plants, avoided cost, IRP…
• General Assembly: 45 bills in play in 2007
www.energync.net
State Energy OfficeNC Department of Administration
Energy Trends
0.6
0.8
1
1.2
1.4
1.6
1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 2020
Year
Gro
wth
co
mp
ared
to 2
001
Total Energy
Total Trans. Energy
Population
North C
arolina Energy Outlook,
2003
www.energync.net
State Energy OfficeNC Department of Administration
Air Pollution’s Impact on HealthFocus: North Carolina
• EPA studies show:
– 1/3 to 1/2 asthma in NC due to air pollution– Every summer in NC, air pollution causes an extra
240,000 asthma attacks, 6,300 emergency room visits, and 1,900 hospital admissions
(Source: Clay Ballentine, M.D., Asheville, NC)
www.energync.net
State Energy OfficeNC Department of Administration
Sea Level Rise andClimate Change
Ben Poulter, D
uke University; Sam
Pearsall, The Nature
Conservancy
www.energync.net
State Energy OfficeNC Department of Administration
Energy and Water
• Drought has 15-20 communities with less than 90 days of water
• Water for Power Plants at Risk
• Many water-saving opportunities also save energy
• Workshop for local and state governments on December 14 at McKimmon Center
SO2 47 tons CO2
69 million tons
NOx 312 tons
SO2 636 tons
CO2 57 million
tons
NOx 319 tons
Electrical Losses 734 TBtu
Electricity 409 TBtu
ELECTRICPOWER
GENERATION
Nuclear 408 TBtu
Cost of Energy Imports
$10-15 Billion
Petroleum975 TBtu
Natural Gas
236 TBtu
Coal706 TBtu
696 TBtu
969 TBtu226
TBtu
10 TBtu
Wood, Waste, Biomass 96 TBtu
SolarThermal1 TBtu
Hydro33 TBtu
10TBtu 23
TBtu
408 TBtu
6 TBtu
10 TBtu
$10-$
15 b
illion
per y
ear
leaves o
ur e
con
om
y fo
r en
erg
y im
ports
www.energync.net
State Energy OfficeNC Department of Administration
State Energy Plan
• NC Energy Policy Council– Support: ASU Energy Center– Significant Public Input
• Recommendations– Twenty High Priority Action Items– Tied to all Funding Actions
• Will be available at www.EnergyNC.net• 2007 Planning Process Entering Final Phase
www.energync.net
State Energy OfficeNC Department of Administration
Annual NC GHG Emission: Base Case and CAPAG Recommendations
Info at www.ncclimatechange.us/capag.cfm
www.energync.net
State Energy OfficeNC Department of Administration
Energy Use in the Public Sector• SB 668: All State agencies and universities must
reduce energy consumption by 20% by 2010 and 30% by 2015.
• Status: SEO’s Utility Savings Initiative (universities, state agencies, comm colleges, & local govt) – $66 million savings to date (state only)– $100 million Performance Contracting program– 3,000+ employees trained
www.energync.net
State Energy OfficeNC Department of Administration
State Buildings Energy Use
Energy Use per Gross Square Foot14% Reduction
125,000
130,000
135,000
140,000
145,000
150,000
2002-03 2003-04 2004-05 2005-06 2006-07 2007-08
btu/gsf Linear (btu/gsf)
www.energync.net
State Energy OfficeNC Department of Administration
State Buildings Energy Cost Trends
Cost per Million BTU 56% Increase
$10.000
$12.000
$14.000
$16.000
$18.000
$20.000
$22.000
2002-03 2003-04 2004-05 2005-06 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10
$ per MMbtu Linear ($ per MMbtu)
www.energync.net
State Energy OfficeNC Department of Administration
New High Performance Buildings
based on LEED rating system
legislation passed for new and existing buildings
30% greater efficiency
sustainable features
15 State Pilot Projects
NC Arboretum
10,400sf building
$236/mth energy cost
www.energync.net
State Energy OfficeNC Department of Administration
State Fleet Efficiency
• State agencies must displace 20% of their petroleum use in vehicles by 12/09
• Status– Have achieved about 7% displacement – Strategies will include hybrids, E10, B20, E85,
CNG and Propane.– 75% of new state fleet are alternative fuel vehicles– NCDOT now sells only E10 and B20– 6,000 alternative fuel vehicles in state fleet
www.energync.net
State Energy OfficeNC Department of Administration
Renewable Energy Sources• Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency
Portfolio Standard (REPS): NC IOUs must get 12.5% of electricity from RE sources by 2021. Up to 5% can be from EE http://www.ncuc.commerce.state.nc.us/reps/reps.htm
• Rule-making is underway, the REPS will be effective 1/1/08
• RFPs for RE from Progress, Duke, Dominion, and NC EMC have already been issued
www.energync.net
State Energy OfficeNC Department of Administration
Summary of Env. & Energy Drivers - NC
• NC REPS
• Air Quality and Climate Change
• Fuel prices & reliability issues (Katrina)
• NC Legislation (state bldgs, trans. fuels, etc)
• Growing popular awareness
www.energync.net
State Energy OfficeNC Department of Administration
North Carolina
• Can cut energy use by 14% by 2017
• Can achieve an REPS of 20% from renewable energy-energy efficiency by 2017
• Can move 10% of its transportation needs to alternative fuels (e.g. ethanol, biodiesel,) by 2017
• Must plan now for impacts of sea level rise
The Future is Now!!