IFMA's How-To Guide Highlight: g Getting Started on the Path to
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IFMA's How-To Guide Highlight: g Getting Started on the Path to
IFMA's How-To Guide Highlight: g g Getting Started on the Path to y Management g Sustainable Facility Christopher P. Hodges, P.E., CFM, LEED-AP, LEED AP, IFMA Fellow Facility Engineering Associates “How-To” Sustainabilityy Guides Getting Started EPA s ENERGY STAR® EPA’s Portfolio Manager Sustainability in the Food Service Environment Lighting No Cost/Low Cost Energy Savings Landscaping Certification Systems Water Getting g Started on the Path to Sustainable Facility Management Christopher P. Hodges, P.E., CFM, LEED‐AP, IFMA Fellow Principal, P i i l Facility Engineering Associates • What is Sustainable Facility Management? • Strategy and Tools The things you really need to know! • Case Studies • Sustainability is the ability to meet the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs. [B dtl d] [Brundtland] World Commission on Environment and Development: Our Common Future – April 1987 The Triple Bottom Line P People l Planet Triple Bottom Line ECONOMIC Profit People Place FM Process Sustainability Sustainable Facility Management is a process of integrating the p people, p , p place and business of an organization g that optimizes economic, environmental, and social benefits of sustainability. Why Are Existing Buildings Important? 76 million residential and 5 million commercial buildings in the U.S. • These Buildings Consume: – 40% of all energy used in U.S. – 76% of all electricity • These Buildings Generate: – 36% of total CO2 emissions Figure 5. Distribution of Floorspace by Principal Building Activity, 2003 70 billion Square feet Source: Energy Information Administration, 2003 Commercial Buildings Energy Consumption Survey. Released in 2006 That’s about $200 billion in annual utility costs! The Financial Case for Facilities Corporate Headquarters Model Total Cost of Ownership This represents the growth in total cost of ownership over 50 years $550,000,000 $450,000,000 $350,000,000 $250,000,000 $150,000,000 • Mid-Rise, Mid Rise 400 400,000 000 square feet Year • Design & Construction Costs (CRV): $47,600,000* • Capital Renewal: 2% of CRV** • O&M Budget $6.30/sf*** • Inflation: 3% * RS Means 2009 Square Foot Costs ** National Research Council, 1990. Committing to the Cost of Ownership: Maintenance & Repair of Public Buildings *** IFMA Benchmarks #32 Headquarters Average 48 45 42 39 36 33 30 27 24 21 18 15 12 9 6 3 0 $50,000,000 The Financial Case for Facilities Total Cost of Ownership In Terms of Total Dollars . . . Total Cost of Ownership 12% 14% 74% Design & Construction Capital Renewal O&M D&C: $47M $ CR: $54M O&M: $284M Total: $385M The Financial Case for Facilities Total Cost of Ownership Savings in O&M and Capital Renewal . . . Total Cost of Ownership Savings 12% Design & Construction 14% Capital Renewal O&M $47M Total $ CR: $54M → $ 3M O&M $284M → $28M O&M: 74% Save 5% in Cap. Renewal Save 10% in O&M D&C: Total: $385M → $31M . . . A good reason to be green! The Financial Case for Facilities In Terms of Total Dollars (Millions) . . . With modest operational and capital cost savings Building Savings $31 Building Cost $385 $0 $1,000 $2,000 $3,000 $4,000 The Financial Case for Facilities What about People? Typical design and construction costs account for only about 2% of an organization’s total cost to exist. Life-Cycle Costs of a Facility The Cost of Productivity 6% 2% Average annual cost for P Personnel: l $300 $300-600/sf 600/ f For facilities: $20/sf 92% Salaries of Occupants Cost of Operating and Maintaining Original Design and Construction (Cotts, D.G., The Facility Management Handbook, Second Edition, 1999) For energy: $2.50/sf $2 50/sf Productivity (People) Cost In Terms of Total Dollars (Millions) . . . People Savings What about this? $350 $3,500 People Cost Building Savings $31 Building Cost We know this is possible. $385 $0 $1,000 $2,000 $3,000 $4,000 Environmental Cost? Quick Facts • Buildings use $200 billion worth of electricity and natural t l gas eachh year. • If the energy efficiency of U.S. buildings improved by 10 percent, Americans would save about $20 billion and reduce greenhouse gases equal to the emissions from about 30 million vehicles • The energy gy used byy commercial and industrial buildings g in the U.S. is responsible for nearly 50 percent of our national emissions of greenhouse gases http://www.energystar.gov/index See: ENERGY STAR Challenge What is Sustainable Facility M Management? t? • • Strategy and Tools The things you really need to know! • Case Studies Determine Commitment : Take Your Organization’s Temperature Environmental Social Economic Create Alignment g Implement, Measure and Monitor Triple Bottom Line Energy Water Materials and Resources Indoor Environment Site Establish Starting Point Determine your commitment PDF available at www.ifma.org Create alignment g • Environmental • Social • Economic Environmental Benefit Economic Benefit Social Benefit Initiative Intent Reflective Roof ↓ Heat Island Effect +/- +/- +/- Low H2O Fixtures i ↓ Water Use + + +/ +/- Commissioning ↓ Energy Use + + + Reduced Mercury ↓ Hazardous Waste + - +/- Lighting Retrofit ↓ Energy Use + + +/- More Windows ↑ Daylighting y g g - - + Education ↑ Knowledge + +/- + Establish your starting point • Sustainable Sites • Energy Efficiency • Water Efficiency • Indoor I d E Environmental i l Quality Q li • Materials & Resources • Green Building Goals HK- BEAM (1995) Japan Sustainable Building Consortium (2002) Energy Star (1992) Leadership in Energy & Environmental Design (2000) GBCA Green Star (2003) BRE Environmental Assessment Method (1993) 1. Site The 5 things g you y really need to know! 2 Water 2. 3. Energy 4. What’s coming and going from our buildings? 5. Indoor environment #1 Site Alternative Transportation Workplace Alternatives #1 Site • Operational Energy Usage: Average Office Building 92.9 kBTU/sf/year How much energy does the average commuter use? • Transportation Energy Intensity: Average Commuter 121 kBTU/sf/year 30% MORE Source: Driving to Green Buildings: The Transportation Energy Intensity of Buildings Environmental Building News, September 1, 2007 #2 Water Domestic Process Irrigation #2 Water Domestic Water Use • Light Light-powered, powered touch-free touch free faucets • Dual flush valves • Low-flow water closets & urinals i l • Aerators at lavatories #3 Energy The Importance of Energy Efficiency • Lighting • Heating and Cooling • Plug Loads #3 Energy What is ENERGY STAR Portfolio Manager? • Baseline: Standardizes baseline metric for energy performance (kBTU/sf/yr) • Benchmark: Compares efficiency with like buildings (Scale of 1-100) • Recognition: ENERGY STAR label ENERGY STAR buildings: • Use 35% less energy than average buildings • Cost $0.54 less per square foot to operate when compared to an average building g (($2.10/sf less than a below-average g building) g) • Prevent 25 billion pounds a year of greenhouse gas emissions, relative to typical facilities #4 What’s coming and going? Sustainable Purchasing 1992 www.energystar.gov 1988 www.ecologo.org/en/ 1989 www.greenseal.org Purchasingg Guidelines • • US EPA Environmentally Preferable Program (EPP) www.epa.gov/epp #4 What’s coming and going? • Consumables • Durable goods • Lamps • Food • Alterations & Additions #4 What’s coming and going? • Recycle: – Paper – Glass – Toner Cartridges – Cardboard – Food Waste – Metals – Plastics – Batteries #5 Indoor Environment G Green Cleaning Cl i • • • • • • • Green products Sustainable i bl equipment i Dilution strategies Standard operating procedures Training Strategies to promote hand hygiene Guidelines for safe handling of chemicals (spill prevention, etc.) • Daytime D i cleaning l i • Occupant feedback #5 Indoor Environment ENERGY MANAGEMENT Utilization of Controls to optimize energy savings at HVAC Equipment (On/Off Scheduling, Temperature Setback, Modulating Outside Air, etc.) Targeted Projects Complete No No No Complete Complete Complete NO High Hi h ROI Low L ROI High Hi h EB HVAC Minimization at Holidays & During Building NonUse X X Equipment Monitoring and Control Policy & Implementation p X X Dual Heating/Cooling Restrictions Minimizing Re-Heat/ReCool X X Expand Capabilities of Existing EMCS X X EMCS E Expansion i to t Central C t l Plant Pl t and d Major M j Equipment E i t X X EMCS Controller Upgrade (APOGEE) X X Install VFD Controls on Cooling Tower Fans, Air-Handling Units, etc. X X T Turn Off E Exhaust/Ventilation h t/V til ti When Wh Not N t Needed N d d X X Low L EB • What is Sustainable Facility Management? • Strategy and Tools The things you really need to know! • Case Studies NEA Headquarters, at a glance: • • • • • 470,000 SF Washington DC Washington, Constructed in 1936, renovated in 1991 Began certification effort in 2007 Internal Team – 7 people Facilities Group • External Team Goals: • Improve energy efficiency • Seek ENERGY STAR label • LEED-EB Certification Energy Audit Case Study Started with a rating of 63… • Set up schedules within the building control system to shut the air handling units off when zones were unoccupied • Used economizer mode on air handling units during cooler weather to avoid running chiller plant • Mi Minimized/eliminated i i d/ li i d use off steam humidifiers h idifi within i hi 19 air i handling units and rebuilt/replaced steam traps. Optimized Start Start’ for air handlers with Energy • Programmed ‘Optimized Management Control System (EMCS) • Purchased ENERGY STAR equipment • Installed variable frequency drives for cooling tower fans • Installed motion sensors in restrooms Energy Audit Case Study Energy: • 10% Reduction in energy costs in Year 1 • Total Project Cost = $45,445 $16 800 for Energy Audit $16,800 $28,645 on Energy Conservation Measures • $365,000 Total Savings Year 2007 2008 2009 2010 Annual Energy Costs $ $1,287,769 $1,161,042 $1,050,303 $913 764 $913,764 (Estimated) ENERGY STAR Rating 63 70 77 87 (Estimated) $738,000 in Baseline Savings* (2010 Savings Estimated) * Savings calculated assuming a constant 2007 energy cost over 2008 and 2009. Received ENERGY STAR Label in 2009 Water: • Installation of Automatic Flush Valves • Installation of Waterless Urinals • Replacement of Faucet Aerators R lt Results: Annual ua Water ate Savings Sa gs 891,000 89 ,000 ga gallons o s Implementation Costs $10,000 (in-house labor) Annual Cost Savings $8,900 Water Use Reduction 13% • Started S d on LEED LEED-EB EB • Moved over to Green Globes • Achieved 2 Green Globes Lessons Learned The Top 5 . . . . • Start with strategy and alignment alignment. • Utilize available resources. • Start St t small, ll be b patient. ti t • Workforce buy-in is important! • Measure, benchmark, and publicize. Determine Commitment : Take Your Organization’s Temperature Environmental Social Economic Create Alignment g Implement, Measure and Monitor Triple Bottom Line Energy Water Materials and Resources Indoor Environment Site Establish Starting Point ENERGY STAR www.energystar.gov ENERGY STAR is a joint program of the United States of America Environmental Protection Agency and the United States of America Department p of Energy gy helping p g to save money and protect the environment through energy efficient products and practices. Green Globes www.greenglobes.com Green Globes is a building environmental design and management tool that includes an online assessment protocol, rating system and guidance for green building design, operation and management. Green Globes is owned and operated by the Green Building Initiative (GBI). Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED®) www.usgbc.org LEED® is a green building rating system of the United States of America Green Building Council. It is a third party certification system and benchmarks design, construction, and operation of high performance green buildings. http://www.ifmafoundation.org/ IFMA's How-To Guide Hi hli ht S Highlight: Session i 1 -Getting Started in Sustainable Facility Management Christopher P P. Hodges Hodges, P P.E., E CFM CFM, LEED‐AP, IFMA Fellow Principal Facility Engineering Associates www feapc com www.feapc.com http://www.ifmafoundation.org/