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Posts Tagged ‘Carbon Reduction’

Interior Control customer wins award!!!

Friday, November 11th, 2011

November 10th 2011, London UK. March Foods Ltd has just won the award for ‘Best Industrial Lighting project of the year’ at LUX Live! Well done them. We are very proud here at Interior Control Ltd as they’re one of our customers. We worked with them to look at a whole range of solutions that would assist them to achieve their targets for energy reduction. Over many months we measured electricity usage by implementing distribution level board monitoring, working with them to understand their usage – then provided the Dialight LED High Bay lights which cap off the project. They saved over 72% of their lighting bill! If you’re interested in how this forward thinking large food warehouse has reduced their bills – just give us a call or check out the website…. www.interiocontrol.co.uk

Does my Carbon Footprint look big in this?

Monday, March 8th, 2010

Girls_back_on_beachThe Carbon Trust has published the findings of a survey of 2047 British adults interviewed in February 2010 and asked about what they put in their shopping trolley. A quarter of people say it’s not just carbs but carbon that now influences their shopping habits.

The research shows that carbon counting now stands shoulder to shoulder with calorie counting when it comes to the weekly shop.

  • 86% of consumers want their favourite brands to help combat the threat of climate change by reducing their carbon footprint.
  • Almost half (43%) are actively seeking information about the carbon impact of the products they buy and more than half (52%) would be more loyal to a brand if they could see at a glance they were taking steps to reduce their footprint.
  • It seems we’re more ready than ever to stand by our carbon principles, with almost a quarter (22%) of respondents willing to stop buying their favourite brands if they didn’t commit to bearing the Carbon Reduction Label.
  • Cars, electrical goods and food were the products we most wanted to see making the carbon commitment.

Euan Murray from the Carbon Trust said: “People are increasingly looking for simple ways to reduce their carbon footprint, without sacrificing on price, taste or convenience.  They want to protect the environment, but are often confused about how they can make a difference.

We know they don’t want to hear about big numbers and global targets – they want to see at a glance which companies and brands are doing their bit to tackle climate change. The Carbon Reduction Label is on a wide range of our favourite household brands and is a badge of assurance that consumers can look for to help them decide what makes it into their trolley”.

British city centres built in the 60’s & 70’s will have to be torn down to meet carbon targets

Thursday, February 4th, 2010
70's office block

70's office block

In an interview with The Times, Paul Morrell of the Department for Business, Innovation & Skills said: “In the Sixties, everything was built cheaper, faster and nastier. If you are going to try to fix buildings, then really you won’t have too many problems with anything built earlier than the Fifties or after the Eighties.

Although you can do some things to buildings from the Sixties and Seventies, like replacing the roofs, there are probably some places that need to come down entirely.

The buildings that pose the most difficulties are semi-industrialised, highly inefficient, badly insulated and so ugly that they are not worth refurbishing.”

Mr Morrell has been charged with ridding the construction industry of carbon to meet a government target to cut UK carbon emissions by 80 per cent by 2050. The Government has a target for all new commercial buildings built from 2018 to be zero-carbon, but a strategy for how to deal with existing stock has yet to be established.

10:10 lightbulb challenge

Wednesday, January 27th, 2010
10:10 blog item

10:10 blog item

Here are five things you might not know about low-energy light bulbs:

  1. There are low-energy bulbs that work with dimmer switches
  2. Yes, you can replace your halogen spotlights
  3. Modern low-energy bulbs give off lots of lovely, flicker-free light
  4. Handsome globe-shaped eco-bulbs are available
  5. You can save more than £50 per bulb replaced

As you probably guessed already, January is 10:10 Lighting Month. To celebrate the clever people at 10:10 have put together a very cool interactive tips page that tells you which bulbs you can replace – and with what.

What will the Carbon Reduction Commitment scheme mean to you?

Friday, January 15th, 2010
Carbon Reduction requires action

Carbon Reduction requires action

01 / Introduction

By now, most Building readers will be aware of the Carbon Reduction Commitment (CRC) energy efficiency scheme starting in April. The CRC is a mandatory emissions trading scheme that will affect both public and private energy users, including property owners and occupiers. Its aim is to encourage and reward improvements in energy efficiency.

The scheme is supposed to be an integral part of achieving the government’s target of an 80% cut in emissions by 2050. By 2020, it is envisaged that the CRC will cut annual carbon emissions by 1.2 million tonnes, which equates to 1% of total emissions.

The CRC is designed to be a more equitable carbon reduction instrument compared with taxation, with the potential to reward good carbon behaviour. The key principle of the scheme is that organisations with low carbon abatement costs will invest to reduce consumption rather than buy allowances.

While at present the impact of the CRC regime is more of an administrative than fiscal burden, the future position is likely to hit budgets harder. In this article we will explore the potential impact of the legislation and the scheme in practice on an example company from an investment and operational cost perspective.

02 / What it is and how it will work

The “introductory” phase of the scheme commences in April 2010 and runs until 2013. From April, companies will have to register and compile emissions data for the first year – 2010/11 – which will be called the “footprint year”. At the outset, the scheme will place reporting requirements on organisations that fall within the scheme, the first report being due in July 2011.

Organisations that consume 6,000MWh or more of electrical energy per year through half-hourly meters (equivalent to a bill of about £500,000) will be full participants in the scheme and subject to compliance and credit purchase requirements. Organisations that use less than 6,000MWh will be subject to compliance reporting standards only.

Put simply, organisations must purchase carbon credits each April to cover all the CO2 they anticipate emitting over the year ahead.

The first purchase needs to be made in April 2011 and to inform this, the organisation can use its 2010/11 consumption as a baseline and predict possible improvements over the year ahead. A greater or lesser degree of the amount they spend on these will be returned after six months, depending on the company’s energy performance compared with others.

During the introductory phase, the credits will have to be purchased at an initial cost of £12 per tonne of carbon. This is anticipated to rise to between £40 and £50 per tonne after 2013, under a capped trading regime.

The government will rank all organisations in one league table each October based on their performance in the previous year. For example, the first league table will be published in October 2011 based on performance in the “footprint year” (2010/11). On publication of the league table, the money will be redistributed among the participants in the scheme. The government will rank each participant based on three metrics:

Absolute metric: Percentage change in absolute emissions of each organisation compared with previous years

Early action metric: Good energy management during the introductory phase

Growth metric: The growth or decline of an organisation during its participation in the CRC (that is, percentage change of emissions per unit of turnover).

During the three year introductory phase, the weighting placed on each metric is shown in this table.

Table showing CRC Introductory Phase weighting

Table showing CRC Introductory Phase weighting

03 / What next?

In subsequent years a 75% weighting will be placed on the absolute metric and 25% on the growth metric. The league table will not be based on the total emissions of each organisation, but on the percentage improvement each one makes each year.

After 2010/11, those organisations that make the biggest relative reduction in emissions are generally going to find themselves higher up the table and by doing so may profit, while poor performers will see a reduced return. The overall income generated by the CRC scheme will be revenue neutral from a government perspective.

This will also establish a reputational standard for all organisations within the scheme, with public transparency of their performance in the league table.

Coupled with the financial aspect, this should provide incentive to take measures to improve energy performance and reduce emissions, which would be rewarded with a higher league table position and a greater recovery (or even profit) against the cost of acquiring the carbon credits. The CRC is therefore likely to earn a place high on the business agenda.

04 / What will the impact be?

To date, there has been a general lack of understanding regarding the full financial impact of the regime, including not only the payment recycling mechanism, but also the inherent capital cost of any improvements and the cost of the actual energy used.

We know that during the introductory phase the price per tonne of carbon is £12. This alone will add about 7–8% to annual energy bills at current prices. However, during the introductory phase, even the worst performers in the league table will get most of their expenditure back via recycling six months later, which means initially the scheme will have a small financial impact.

For example, in October 2011, the best performers will receive their full monies back plus 10%. Meanwhile, the worst performers will receive only 90% of their initial outlay. In following years, the bonus/penalty amount will increase by 10% per year so that by 2015 it will be +/-50%. The CRC scheme will therefore evolve from an administrative burden to a financial one.

However, it is not as simple as receiving an extra 10% if you are at the top of the table or a 10% reduction if you are at the bottom, with incremental amounts in between. This can be demonstrated using the example calculations from the Environment Agency in the table on the left.

Using company F as an example, 2,200 allowances are bought in April 2011 at £12/tonne to cover forecasted emissions for the year ahead. Company F believes it will generate an extra 200 tonnes of carbon compared with 2010/11 when it emitted 2,000 tonnes. The amount recycled in October 2011 is based on performance in 2010/2011 not on how much is spent by the organisation. Therefore the amount back does not bear any relation to the initial outlay (that is, almost £4,000 less, even though the company finished second in the league table).

Interestingly, company H in the example doesn’t buy any allowances to cover its 2011/12 emissions, but still receives £1,094 when the revenue raised is recycled by the government. If company H does report emissions for 2011/12, then it will have to surrender the required amount of allowances and will need to purchase these through the “safety valve” prior to July 2012. In this case the price will be linked to the carbon price in the EU emission trading scheme and so could rise higher than £12/tonne of CO2.

Buying allowances in advance requires organisations to have in place sufficient systems for managing energy consumption and predicting future emissions based on the expected acquisition, improvement and disposal of assets. If not, a poor forecast might mean either too much money tied up in the CRC scheme or the risk of buying allowances at a higher rate through the safety valve.

Table showing the impact of the CRC regime

Table showing the impact of the CRC regime

05 / Hypothetical cost model

The CRC scheme is expected to flex its muscle after the introductory phase in 2013 when the amount of allowances available is capped and auctioned to organisations. Assuming the price settles at the higher end of the £40–£50/tonne of CO2 range, it could add 30% to energy bills. Of this, 40% is potentially at risk for the worst performers in 2014 and 50% in 2015. But will it be enough to encourage investment in energy efficiency measures?

This is best demonstrated using a hypothetical example of one organisation, CRC Ltd, with three office buildings fully participating in the scheme. CRC Ltd cannot pass on the cost of the allowances it purchases and pays for all the energy the buildings consume without recouping the cost through a service charge. The three buildings all have the potential for implementing energy efficiency improvements as follows:

Office 1: Nineties, air-conditioned, 20,000m2

Office 2: 2002, air-conditioned, 30,000m2

Office 3: Nineties, naturally ventilated, 12,000m2.

Energy consumption and CO2 emissions for the footprint year for CRC Ltd are given below including the cost of buying allowances during the introductory and capped phases assuming emissions stay the same.

Table showing different office scenarios

Table showing different office scenarios

Over the next five years, CRC Ltd has a capital expenditure budget available to replace elements of the building services (boilers, lighting and pumps) on a like-for-like basis, with no improvements in energy efficiency.

In spring 2010, CRC Ltd is considering three courses of action:

Scenario one Replace boilers, lighting and pumps with more efficient, but standard versions

Scenario two Spend extra on higher efficiency versions in the footprint year to reduce energy consumption in subsequent years

Scenario three Spend extra on higher efficiency versions during 2013/14 to reduce CRC under the “capped phase” of the scheme.

The investment shown in the following tables is the “extra over” amount required to buy the more energy efficient plant. So, under scenario 1, the amount of extra over investment is zero, while in the remaining two scenarios the investment is made in two different years.

For the first example, we have assumed that CRC Ltd will finish mid-table in the CRC performance league for scenarios two and three after making the additional investment in energy efficient plant. On this basis, CRC Ltd will recover all of its CRC credit cost, but will not receive any bonus payment.

As shown on table one, undertaking no energy efficiency improvements puts CRC Ltd in a better financial position compared with the extra investment required to improve their portfolio. A key assumption here however is that CRC Ltd will incur the full penalty deduction (£57,166 (allowances bought) x 10% = £5,717) each year until the more energy efficient plant has been installed.

However, what happens if we change our assumption and say that by making relative improvements in energy efficiency, CRC Ltd could finish higher in the league table and receive a bonus payment in the years thereafter?

Table1

Table1

In the next table, under scenario two, CRC Ltd receives a 10% bonus payment in 2012 and 5% in 2013. In scenario three, CRC Ltd receives a 20% bonus payment in 2014 and 10% in 2015.

Scenario three puts CRC Ltd in a marginally better financial position compared with the other scenarios, although it does assume that bonus payments will be received once improvements have been implemented.

Table2

Table2

This suggests that the relative improvement in emissions carries more value during the capped phase when the allowance price is in the region of £50/tonne of CO2. Consequently, organisations may choose to strategically plan for this and defer any investment until their league table position is confirmed.

06 / Conclusion

So is the financial liability placed on organisations by the CRC significant enough to demonstrate a convincing business case for improving energy performance in existing buildings? Not quite. However, the business case becomes more compelling when energy savings are taken into account as shown in the table below.

Table3

Table3

Early investment in more energy efficient systems can reap significant savings in terms of reduced energy costs. The example shows the initial investment paid back in less than four years. If early action is difficult due to the current economic climate, then appropriate investment in time for the capped phase (2013) will also significantly reduce CRC liability and generate substantial energy savings.

The analysis included here is simplistic but it does demonstrate that early investment in energy efficiency is best, and any action is good. Developing a comprehensive and robust business case that includes wider cost benefits (for example, CRC administrative costs, capital allowances, maintenance costs, improved internal environment, corporate social responsibility benefits, energy performance and display energy certificates) will support this and convince senior managers to invest.

The current uncertainty is the league table and where companies may expect to find themselves. This affects the bonus or penalty imposed and will skew the business case. However, running a sensitivity analysis and identifying a range of outcomes will quantify the risk of any investment strategy.

A clear understanding of the cost of various carbon abatement measures is also required. Once baseline energy consumption has been established and a survey of the portfolio undertaken, a cost effective improvement programme can be determined. These improvements will range from “soft” operational opportunities to the replacement of building services components with improved energy efficiency as part of planned capital works. Knowing the cost of each improvement and how much carbon will be abated is key to compare against buying allowances.

The CRC is a boardroom as well as a plant room issue and the benefits of taking action need to be communicated in financial speak rather than kilowatt hours, CO2 or sustainability.

From an article published in BUILDING 15th Jan 2010 by Richard Quatermaine & Steve Smith of Cyril Sweet.

http://www.building.co.uk/story.asp?storycode=3156140&encCode=0686112881BC048718708JTBS737226611

Interior Control Ltd. joins the 10:10 campaign

Thursday, November 5th, 2009
10:10 Campaign logo

10:10 Campaign logo

We are delighted to announce that Interior Control Ltd. has signed up to the 10:10 campaign.

What is 10:10? you may well ask…

10:10 is an ambitious project to unite every sector of British society behind one simple idea: that by working together we can achieve a 10% cut in the UK’s carbon emissions in 2010.

Why bother?

Why bother jumping out of the way of a speeding car? Why bother removing a burst appendix?

Cutting 10% in one year is a bold target, but for most of us it’s an achievable one, and is in line with what scientists say we need over the next 18 months. We now know for certain that unless we act quickly to reduce our use of dirty fossil fuels, humanity will face terrible problems in the years to come. Politicians have so far failed to do what needs to be done, so it’s time for ordinary people to step in and show that we’re ready to defend our children’s futures. It’s now or never for the climate.

By signing up to a 10% target we’re not just supporting 10:10 – we’re making it happen. In our homes, in our workplaces, our schools and our hospitals, our galleries and football clubs and universities, we’ll be backing each other up as we take the first steps on the road to becoming a zero-carbon society. It’s easy to feel powerless in the face of a huge problem like climate change, but by uniting everyone behind immediate, effective and achievable action, 10:10 enables all of us to make a meaningful difference.

What can we do to help you?

Both the MACH and our range of smart meter products will substantially reduce your energy consumption, often helping you to meet your 10% commitment in one go. Find out more at http://www.interiorcontrol.co.uk

How does this work with the CRC?

The 10:10 campaign is in no way linked with the government’s CRC Energy Efficiency Scheme (formerly know as the Carbon Reduction Commitment or CRC) legislation due to start in April 2010. However, if you are working towards reducing your emissions by 10% in 2010 then you are clearly on your way to meeting your obligations under the CRC.