Energy Efficiency in Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Virginia’s Industrial Fan Systems, 2014-2017 – ResearchAndMarkets.com

DUBLIN–(BUSINESS WIRE)–The "Energy
Efficiency in Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and
Virginia's Industrial Fan Systems, 2014-2017"
report has been
added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

This report focuses on analyzing energy use, energy efficiency, and CO2
emissions-reduction potential in industrial fan systems in selected
South Atlantic U.S. states of Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, South
Carolina, and Virginia.

One of the major barriers to effective policy making and increased
action by states and utilities to improve energy efficiency in
industrial fan systems is the lack of information and data on the
magnitude and cost-effectiveness of the energy savings potential in
industrial fan systems in each state.

This lack of information creates an obstacle to developing a
comprehensive and effective strategy, roadmap, and programs for
improving fan systems efficiency cost-effectively. It is far easier to
quantify the incremental energy savings of substituting an
energy-efficient motor for a standard motor than it is to quantify the
energy conservation of applying other energy efficiency and system
optimization practices to an existing fan system.

Now that states have different programs to set targets, including
passing legislation to enact formal energy efficiency resource
standards, setting long-term energy savings targets through utility
commissions tailored to each utility, or incorporating energy efficiency
as an eligible resource in renewable portfolio standards (RPS),
investment in energy efficiency in industrial fan systems to tap into
the huge saving potentials quantified in this report can help utilities
to meet their targets, reduce their greenhouse gas emissions, and
thereby help with climate change mitigation.

In addition, energy efficiency in industrial motor systems stimulates
economic growth and creates jobs in a variety of ways (direct, indirect,
and induced jobs creation). Investment in energy efficiency creates more
jobs per dollar invested than traditional energy supply investments.
Energy efficiency in industrial motor systems also creates more jobs in
the local economy, whereas energy supply jobs and investment dollars
often flow outside the state.

Key analyses and results included:

  • Electricity use by manufacturing subsector (NAICS code 31-33) in each
    state studied
  • Electricity use for motor systems and fan systems by manufacturing
    subsector (NAICS code 31-33) in each state studied
  • Electricity use by industrial fan systems by size in each state studied
  • Market barriers to energy efficiency in industrial motor and fan
    systems
  • Energy Efficiency Cost Curves for industrial fan systems for each
    state using eight major energy efficiency measures
  • Energy saving potential and cost of conserved energy (US$/MWh-saved)
    for each efficiency measures in each state studied
  • The cost-effective and total technical energy efficiency potential in
    industrial fan systems in each state studied
  • Energy saving potential for each energy efficiency measure by system
    size
  • GHG emissions reduction potential for each efficiency measure in each
    state
  • Sensitivity of the results with respect to changes in electricity
    prices and discount rates
  • Implications for markets, utilities, and policy makers

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/33jzkw/energy_efficiency?w=4

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Related
Topics: Energy
and Natural Resources
, HVAC
(Heating, Ventilation, and Air Conditioning)