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Energy audit
implementation in
member States
Ettore PiantoniCEN CENELEC - SFEM
Agenda
SFEM seminar June 19, 2017
• Policy Makers objectives
• Market needs
• Standard role
Critical enabling tools
Top priorities making Art.8 more effective
June 19 Energy Audit seminar
Italy
Sweden
UK
Industrial Associations
Austria
Denmark
France
Germany
Presentations available @CEN CENELEC Website
Art. 8 energy audit framework on Energy Audit (EA)
Mandatory requirements for large enterprises
Encouragement of SMEs
Monitoring, verification and penalties
Qualification of energy auditors
Encouragement of ISO 50001 and 14001Article 8
Minimum requirements for audits
(Annex VI)
The legislative framework
Source: Energy audits and energy management systems under the Energy efficiency directive. S. Pontoglio June 19, 2017
Policy maker needs & objectives
• Promote of energy efficiency to ensure achievement of 2020 target and
beyond
• Support Member States progresses on achieving targets
• Raise awareness and expertise about energy efficiency in large enterprises
and SME
• Promote the market uptake of energy efficiency measures
• Benchmark energy efficiency by market segment and technology
No changes on legal framework
Guideline to make 2019 Energy Audit more cost effective
Business value of an Energy Audit (EA)
• Is the first de-risking tool of any energy performance improvement
measure:
✓ qualify and quantify the value to be captured
✓ generate the business plan to assess project financeability
✓ triggers investments: trust and commitment
• M&V generate the cash flow of the project
• Benchmark organization energy efficiency and sustainability
• Is the “entry level” of the Energy Management System
How many EA we may expect?
Austria Denmark(1) France Germany Italy Sweden UK(1)
(1) Obligated parties
Critical enabling tools - 1
• Definition of obligated party to include energy threshold level
• Digitalized & harmonized reporting to evaluate EA effectiveness:
➢ executive summary with key information
➢ energy consumption/Total final use consumption
➢ potential savings (TOE, €), Non Energy Benefits (NEB), Potential saving as share of
consumption
➢ investments – Yearly savings
➢ industry consumption benchmark
➢ implementation rate of EA recommendation
• Clusters for multi sites - organizations:
➢ cluster of homogeneous sites
➢ sample selection criteria for representativeness, EE measures replicability, scalability
• Energy Audit quality to de risk investments
• Repository/inventory of Large Organizations
Critical enabling tools - 2
• 2019 EA: measurement and monitoring coverage of site consumption ( by
sector)
• Integration with other enabling and de risking initiatives: EnPI measurement
in products, interoperability – process integration (industry 4.0, smart factory,
smart buildings, underwriting procedures …)
• ISO 50001 Certification as proof of compliance with Art.8 (scope of
certification = EA boundaries)
• Energy performance tracking for benchmark and statistics
• Energy Performance Contracting minimum requirements
• Validation of standardized energy efficiency measures - NEB - risk
assessment
• Energy Audit uptake in SME: reach out SME with supporting schemes for EA
and EE measures implementation
CEN CENELEC mandate M479
• Develop energy audit standards to provide minimum requirements for
compliance with Art.8
• EN 16247- 1,2,3,4,5
• EN 16247 does not include:
➢ reporting guidelines for EA effectiveness and benchmarking
➢ cluster and sampling criteria for multi – site organizations
➢ cluster criteria for measurement plan
➢ guidance for SMEs (by sector)
➢ reference to business risk assessment
➢ link with underwriting procedures for project financeability
➢ reference to Non Energy Benefits (NEB)
Priorities to improve Art. 8 and energy audit effectiveness
Policy Makers
Standardization body
• Technical Report to support EA standards
Top priorities for making EA more cost effective
• ISO 50001 Certification as proof of compliance with Art.8 (scope of certification = EA boundaries)
• 2019 EA: measurement and monitoring coverage of site consumption
• Energy Performance Contracting minimum requirements
➢ Validation of standardized energy efficiency measures- risk assessment - NEB – EEFIG underwriting procedures
➢ technology specific energy performance tracking: measurement and verification reporting ex ante and ex post
• Cross sectoral approach to energy efficient equipment and processes integration
• Work on energy consumption thresholds or other mechanisms to improve cost-effectiveness
➢ digitalized & harmonized reporting to evaluate EA effectiveness (minimum requirements)
➢ clusters for multi sites – organizations – sampling for representativeness
• Support holistic approach and promote EA as de risking tool for EE project financeability
• SME: promote supporting schemes for EE measures implementation
• Dedicated guidelines by sectors for SMEs
Take aways
• Is the first de-risking tool for energy efficiency financeability
• EA and EnMS provides solutions to organization
• While we’ll make EA more cost effective, Member States have to provide
feedbacks to obligated parties with sectoral benchmarks, BAT and statistical
analysis
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