1 / 29

RBSA Metering Interim Presentation

RBSA Metering Interim Presentation. Ecotope, Inc. July 17, 2012. Agenda . Introduction/Overview Sample Metered end uses Early look at the data Next steps. Timeline and Deliverables. Residential Building Stock Assessment - Metering. 2 year whole-home metering study

darice
Télécharger la présentation

RBSA Metering Interim Presentation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. RBSA Metering Interim Presentation Ecotope, Inc. July 17, 2012

  2. Agenda Introduction/Overview Sample Metered end uses Early look at the data Next steps

  3. Timeline and Deliverables

  4. Residential Building Stock Assessment - Metering • 2 year whole-home metering study • Detailed look at the determinants of energy use • Last major regional study (ELCAP) 25 years old • Major changes in home energy use since • No regional lighting study done until now • Collect data for end use load shapes • Data analysis will provide key information for regional planning efforts and utility incentive programs • Northwest Power and Conservation Council’s 7th Power Plan

  5. Residential Building Stock Assessment - Metering • High resolution accounting of electricity usage for at least 90% of all house end-uses • Detailed (5 minute) load shapes for all end uses of interest (heating, cooling, hot water, major appliances, plug loads) • 25 heat pumps (control settings) • Run time/gas usage for gas furnaces/water heaters • Airflow/external static pressure/2 stage data • Daily remote access to all data (except lighting)

  6. Residential Building Stock Assessment • Assessment of base case residential building characteristics in the PNW • 1456 total single family sites in RBSA (65% of sites single family and remainder mfd homes/apts) • Sample frame designed to ensure statistical significance in various subregions (Puget Sound, Western Oregon, Eastern Washington, etc.) • About 600 data fields collected in half day audit • Physical audit (heat loss) • Heating/cooling/hot water equipment survey • Major appliance and plug load census • Room by room lighting survey • About 35% of sites also tested for house/duct tightness

  7. Overall Study Architecture

  8. RBSA Metering Sample • Based on the RBSA sample • Target single-family energy end-uses • Targeted to provide detailed information on: • Major climate zones both heating and cooling • Heating fuel type • Electric heating system types • Contains both electricity and gas elements • Sample recruited from RBSA sample frame and designed to be integrated into that sample

  9. Site Locations

  10. Data Collection Structure • The dataset will provide an end use breakdown • 5 minute accumulation of RMS energy—total service drop and all sub-metered channels (both at panel and via wireless network) • 5 minute averages of key temperatures • 5 minute snapshots of service voltages, true power, power factor (load shapes) • Distinguishes between heating and cooling (heat pumps) • Accumulates gas furnace and gas water heater run-time • Tabulates lighting cycles; these data combined with fixture/bulb data from whole-house lighting audit

  11. Whole Home • Service entry (all electricity to home) • Indoor temperature (main living area) • Outdoor temperature

  12. Heating and Cooling • 19 electric resistance homes • 8 forced air-furnaces; 11 zonal electric • 25 heat pump homes • 3 ductless heat pumps, 2 dual-fuel, 1 packaged unit, 1 ground-source heat pump • 57 natural gas homes • 2 boilers • 2 gas fireplace/wall heaters • 53 gas forced-air

  13. Domestic Hot Water • 60 electric & 41 gas tank water heaters • No on-demand systems

  14. Appliances • Refrigerators (123) • Dishwashers • Freezers • Clothes washers • Clothes dryers • Ranges • Well pumps • Spas

  15. Plug Loads • TVs (160) • Cable boxes • Gaming consoles • Other TV accessories • Computers (103) • Computer peripherals • Space heaters

  16. Lighting • Average of 19 fixture groups per home • On/off cycles, fixture wattage

  17. We’ve Got One… • Nissan Leaf • Wine cooler • Elliptical trainer • Refrigerated drinking fountain • Fish tank

  18. Preliminary Findings • Case Study • Analytic Approach • Interim Metered Data

  19. Case Study: Large Loads

  20. Case Study: Plug Loads

  21. Case Study: Selected Plug Loads

  22. Lighting – Hourly Load

  23. Analytic Approach • Consolidation • Fine-scale daily data is incredibly interesting but can become quickly overwhelming. The solution is data consolidation. • Data can be collapsed into desired time intervals: • hourly, daily, weekly, monthly, yearly • Data can be aggregated by end use across sites

  24. DHW Load Shape – Hourly (Weekday)

  25. Refrigerator Load Shape - Hourly

  26. Refrigerator Load Shape – Daily

  27. Analytic Questions With this dataset we hope to answer the following: • How much energy does a device/category consume in one day, week, month, year? • Is there a seasonal dependence of a given load? • What are the outdoor temperature dependencies of a given load? • What are the different end use load shapes? • Hourly load shapes over 8760 hours of the year for each device monitored • Climate dependent load shapes

  28. Next Steps • Monitor/manage ongoing data collection • Interim Report (Q3 2012) • Final Report (Q4 2013) • Create focused datasets as needed • Oversee testbed

  29. Questions

More Related