There Is Hope For Energy Efficiency!

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By Ralph Cavanagh

Novem­ber 26th, 2013

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In the glob­al com­pe­ti­tion for appeal­ing clean ener­gy solu­tions, a lead­ing entry is the new West Vil­lage at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Cal­i­for­nia at Davis (UC Davis), which today cel­e­brat­ed sig­nif­i­cant progress toward its goal of becom­ing the largest planned “zero-net ener­gy” com­mu­ni­ty in the Unit­ed States.

Sev­en years ago, I was one of nine jurors who select­ed the win­ner in a com­pe­ti­tion to estab­lish the nation’s first uni­ver­si­ty-based cen­ter on ener­gy effi­cien­cy (and yes, it’s hard to believe that this didn’t hap­pen until 2006!). UC Davis fin­ished first in a dis­tin­guished field, and it has more than jus­ti­fied expec­ta­tions in the years since. 

Among the Ener­gy Effi­cien­cy Center’s proud­est achieve­ments is the beau­ti­ful­ly designed space next to the main cam­pus that bills itself as the nation’s largest planned com­mu­ni­ty to reach “net zero” – annu­al­ly con­sum­ing less elec­tric­i­ty than it pro­duces while emit­ting no car­bon pollution.

The “West Vil­lage” is pro­ceed­ing in stages and will ulti­mate­ly house 3,000  stu­dents, along with 500 staff and fac­ul­ty fam­i­lies and a clus­ter of retail and com­mer­cial build­ings. By mak­ing those build­ings far more ener­gy effi­cient than even California’s rig­or­ous stan­dards require, the West Vil­lage archi­tects were able to bal­ance all their pro­ject­ed elec­tric­i­ty needs with onsite solar pho­to­volta­ic (PV) pow­er pro­duc­tion. The UC Davis Cen­ter made a com­mit­ment to reg­u­lar eval­u­a­tions of the West Village’s per­for­mance, too, and the inau­gur­al report was released today.

The results

In the first year of sub­stan­tial occu­pan­cy and ful­ly pow­ered PV sys­tems, rough­ly 1,500 peo­ple in more than 500 apart­ments and a half-dozen mixed-use build­ings came heart­en­ing­ly close to “zero net-ener­gy”: about 87% of the way, to be pre­cise. Thanks to local experts from the Davis Ener­gy Group, we know pret­ty much exact­ly what caused the gap, and what to do about it. 

The solar pow­er sys­tems per­formed pret­ty much exact­ly as adver­tised, although the eval­u­a­tors think we can squeeze out a few more megawatt-hours of elec­tric­i­ty with occa­sion­al clean­ings of the solar pan­els (to remove dust ema­nat­ing from local agri­cul­tur­al oper­a­tions). Also oper­at­ing as pre­dict­ed were the build­ings’ cool­ing and heat­ing sys­tems, and the one- and two-bed­room apart­ment units tak­en as a group. Con­sump­tion was high­er than expect­ed in two prin­ci­pal cat­e­gories: three- and four-bed­room units, whose occu­pants loaded up on plug-in elec­tron­ics and showed remark­able vari­a­tion in month­ly elec­tric­i­ty use; and water heat, where a high-effi­cien­cy tech­nol­o­gy rel­a­tive­ly new to U.S. mar­kets (heat pumps) cre­at­ed some sit­ing and oper­a­tional prob­lems that con­tributed to high­er pow­er use.

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Looking ahead

The West Vil­lage man­agers are con­fi­dent that they can cov­er the remain­ing dis­tance to “zero net ener­gy” and I agree with them. The water heat­ing glitch­es are already most­ly fixed. For the larg­er apart­ments, a host of strate­gies are being deployed to iden­ti­fy and moti­vate the largest elec­tric­i­ty users to waste less ener­gy, start­ing with the repeat­ed­ly proven social sci­ence insight that the best way to change behav­ior is sim­ply to show peo­ple that their neigh­bors are doing better.

Reg­u­lar per­for­mance reports will help with that mes­sage, as well as show the world con­tin­u­ing progress and any remain­ing bar­ri­ers to reach­ing the community’s lauda­to­ry goals.

The next West Vil­lage per­for­mance review is due in ear­ly 2015. I look for­ward to shar­ing the results, and I’ll close with the quote that I autho­rized for use in the news release accom­pa­ny­ing today’s report: 

“The West Vil­lage is what a sus­tain­able ener­gy future looks like for Cal­i­for­nia and the rest of the world.  Its com­mit­ment to com­pre­hen­sive eval­u­a­tions like this one is an impor­tant part of the good exam­ple that the com­mu­ni­ty is set­ting for all the rest of us.”


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