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Energy and Operations Efficiency Workshop for Idaho Food Processors John Thornton Northwest Food Processors Association Twin Falls, Idaho December 2, 2010 1 Plant Productivity: Measuring Plant Energy Intensity

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Page 1: Energy and Productivity Workshop for Competitiveness: Energy Intensity_John Thornton_Dec 2 2010_CleanFuture

Energy and Operations Efficiency Workshop for Idaho Food Processors

John ThorntonNorthwest Food Processors Association

Twin Falls, Idaho December 2, 2010

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Plant Productivity:Measuring Plant Energy Intensity

Page 2: Energy and Productivity Workshop for Competitiveness: Energy Intensity_John Thornton_Dec 2 2010_CleanFuture

NWFPA Energy Projects1. Energy Intensity Baseline2. Access to Energy Data pilot3. Energy Mapping and Assessment

pilot

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Page 3: Energy and Productivity Workshop for Competitiveness: Energy Intensity_John Thornton_Dec 2 2010_CleanFuture

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Energy Intensity Baseline2009: First time to measure energy intensity

of an entire industrial sectorPrimary Objectives:

Determine best way to measure energy intensity

Set a baseline energy intensity value that best represents the NW food processing industry

Compare processing methods (frozen foods, dehydrated products, canned product, etc.)

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Page 4: Energy and Productivity Workshop for Competitiveness: Energy Intensity_John Thornton_Dec 2 2010_CleanFuture

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Baseline Participants70+ NW Food Processing Plants

Identity protected by confidentiality agreement

Prepared by: With support from:

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Page 5: Energy and Productivity Workshop for Competitiveness: Energy Intensity_John Thornton_Dec 2 2010_CleanFuture

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Energy Intensity DefinedWhat is it?

Energy Intensity is the quantity of energy required per unit of output.

EnergyConsumed

ProductionVolume

=

Using less energy to produce a product reduces energy intensity5

Page 6: Energy and Productivity Workshop for Competitiveness: Energy Intensity_John Thornton_Dec 2 2010_CleanFuture

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Calculating Energy Intensity

Standard Units of Measure:

Energy Consumed = BTUs• 1 kWh = 3,412 BTUs• 1 Natural gas therm = 100,000 BTUs• 1 Gallon propane = 91,600 BTUs

Production Volume = Pounds• Plants determine conversion rate

BTUsPounds

(BTU = British Thermal Unit)

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Page 7: Energy and Productivity Workshop for Competitiveness: Energy Intensity_John Thornton_Dec 2 2010_CleanFuture

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Data Collection Example

x 3,412x 100,000x 91,600

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Page 8: Energy and Productivity Workshop for Competitiveness: Energy Intensity_John Thornton_Dec 2 2010_CleanFuture

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Why Measure Energy Intensity?“You can only manage what you measure”Data collection and reporting is critical for

any energy efficiency strategyCorporate or industry-wide

Sets a benchmark for comparison

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Page 9: Energy and Productivity Workshop for Competitiveness: Energy Intensity_John Thornton_Dec 2 2010_CleanFuture

Energy Intensity Baseline

Measures 2006 2007 2008 2009

2010

Number of Plants 56 65 71 63 16

Aggregate Energy Intensity (BTU/Lb) 2,204 2,071 2,088 2,080 1,056

Median Energy Intensity (BTU/Lb) 2,267 2,132 2,266 2,362 1,906

Mean Energy Intensity (BTU/Lb) 5,630 5,071 4,941 4,995 6,910

Est. Error % Primary Method 2.8% 2.9% 7.9% 11.9% 44.6%

Est. Error % Secondary Method

Confidence = 95% 12.9% 11.7% 7.4% 2.7% 129.2%

Confidence = 90% 5.0% 5.0% 0.8% 3.8% 91.4%

Confidence = 85% 0.3% 0.4% 3.6% 5.6% 69.4%

November 30, 2010

Energy & Operations Efficiency Workshop – 12/2/2010

Page 10: Energy and Productivity Workshop for Competitiveness: Energy Intensity_John Thornton_Dec 2 2010_CleanFuture

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Histogram of 2009 Intensity Data

Mean: 4995 BTU/Lb

Median: 2362 BTU/Lb

Aggregate: 2080 BTU/Lb

Median = geometric center of all individual plant energy intensities

Page 11: Energy and Productivity Workshop for Competitiveness: Energy Intensity_John Thornton_Dec 2 2010_CleanFuture

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Intensity by Processing MethodProcessing Method BTU’s/Pound

Dairy, Milk, Cream, Cheese 375

Grain & Oilseed 473

Frozen Foods 1,073

Baking 1,125

Prepared Refrigerated Foods 1,153

Seafood 1,182

Canning 1,913

Animal Slaughtering & Processing 2,570

Prepared Non Refrigerated Foods 3,257

Dehydrators 4,656

Source: NWFPA analysis of 1987 – 2007 energy efficiency audits conducted at 129 ID, OR, and WA food processing plants by the Industrial Assessment Centers at Oregon State University and University of Washington.

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Page 12: Energy and Productivity Workshop for Competitiveness: Energy Intensity_John Thornton_Dec 2 2010_CleanFuture

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Participate in Energy BaselineIt’s not too lateReceive annual updatesGet access to the complete studyContact John Thornton at NWFPA:

[email protected]

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Page 13: Energy and Productivity Workshop for Competitiveness: Energy Intensity_John Thornton_Dec 2 2010_CleanFuture

Energy Mapping and AssessmentIdentify 10-year savings potential in a sample

of food processing plants, analyze and reconcile against energy reduction goal.

Determine common approach for food processing facilities.

Determine the major energy efficiency areas for Energy Roadmap focus.

Identify barriers to energy efficiency implementation and propose solutions.

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Page 14: Energy and Productivity Workshop for Competitiveness: Energy Intensity_John Thornton_Dec 2 2010_CleanFuture

Access to Energy Data pilotWhat?

Determine most effective and cost-efficient methods to collect and present energy data

Deploy hardware and software for energy monitoring systems in food processing plants

Document energy/operations results from access to energy data

Develop industry-wide approach for energy management systems

What does it mean to me?Ability to easily access energy consumption data to aid

plant decision making and improve operations.Assistance to defray costs metering and sub-metering

costs not otherwise covered.15

Energy & Operations Efficiency Workshop – 12/2/2010

Page 15: Energy and Productivity Workshop for Competitiveness: Energy Intensity_John Thornton_Dec 2 2010_CleanFuture

Access to Energy Data pilotSuccess story:Discovered night-time energy consumptionSimple solution:

Mechanical timerto turn off load atnight.

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Page 16: Energy and Productivity Workshop for Competitiveness: Energy Intensity_John Thornton_Dec 2 2010_CleanFuture

Participate in NWFPA Energy ProgramsNWFPA is an Advocate for members’ interests

and a Resource for enhancing their competitive capabilities. NWFPA is your partner for improvement, also to work with other partners to improve the competitiveness of your business.

Engage NWFPA as your efficiency advocate & resource, contact John Thornton:

[email protected]

17Energy & Operations Efficiency Workshop – 12/2/2010