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Columbia Helps "Save New York" by Joining Energy Reduction Incentive Program
Date:
February
10, 2007
Columbia University has taken
another major step forward in its commitment to environmental stewardship by
enrolling in the award-winning electric demand response program "Operation
Save New York", administered by Energy Curtailment Specialists, Inc.
(ECS).As part of the program, the
University agrees to conserve electricity in certain areas of its operations
when there is an electric shortage in New York State.
The idea behind demand response programs is to
have customers reduce electric use when demand for electricity is forecasted to
reach or exceed available supply.Without these programs, the typical method for dealing with imbalances
on the power grid is to enact rolling brownouts, which leave communities in the
dark without warning.Demand response
programs allow facilities to choose to participate in electric conservation,
with advance notice, and receive monetary compensation in return.
"Columbia’s
students, faculty and staff have a long-standing commitment to responsible
environmental stewardship," said Matthew Early, Associate Vice President
of Operations at Columbia University Facilities."We are looking forward to making a
positive impact on our community by joining Operation Save New York."
With electric supply remaining stagnant while
demand increases every year, demand response programs are effective tools to
conserve energy.According to the New
York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA), there is a
shrinking cushion between electricity supply and a growing demand, particularly
in the "downstate" area.On
Aug. 2, 2006, New York
State set a new record
peak electric demand of 33,939 megawatts, breaking the prior year’s record by
1,864 megawatts.Demand response
programs currently have the ability to lower total demand by over 3 percent in New York State.
Columbia will receive day-ahead
notice of periods when the electric grid is forecasted to be unstable and will
respond by reducing chiller set points, running the HVAC system at a lower
setting, and turning off lighting, elevators and non-critical equipment.ECS will also install metering in academic
buildings at the University’s main Morningside
Heights campus, Baker
Field Athletic Complex, Nevis Laboratories and Lamont-Doherty Earth
Observatory.
"Metering will improve our ability to
collect data," said Nilda Mesa,
Columbia’s
Director of Environmental Stewardship."With
the data, we can begin to measure our energy usage and carbon footprint, and
then develop strategies for reducing our greenhouse gas emissions.With the knowledge we will gain, we will also
be able to develop incentive programs to manage our energy usage effectively."
The University is also working with ECS on a
detailed energy audit to discover ways to make Columbia’s facilities more energy efficient
on a day-to-day basis and to utilize enabling technology for responding to
electric shortage emergency events.
Mesa says that the demand
response program builds on an array of environmental efforts already in place
on our campuses that seek to minimize the University’s environmental footprint
and further enhance the culture of respect for the environment within the Columbia community.To learn more about Columbia’s Environmental Stewardship
Initiative, please visit: http://environment.columbia.edu.To learn more about
demand response programs and "Operation Save New York" please visit http://ecsny.com.
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