|
Partnership Between SUNY ESF and
N.Y. Power Authority Yields Cool, Energy-Efficient Project
(Joint press release - SUNY ESF and NYPA)
Contacts:
Brian Warner, NYPA,
914-390-8183
brian.warner@nypa.gov
and
Dave White, SUNY ESF
315-470-6645
dewhite@esf.edu
September 6, 2006
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
SYRACUSE—The successful installation and operation
of two state-of-the-art chillers and other cooling improvements at
the State University of New York College of Environmental Science
and Forestry (SUNY ESF) were heralded today as the result of a
continuing partnership with the New York Power Authority (NYPA) to
further advance clean and efficient energy technologies on the
campus.
“Cooperating with the Power Authority has brought
many benefits to the college, allowing us to test, demonstrate and
use the latest advances in energy-efficiency, and these chillers are
some of the coolest we’ve undertaken—both for the cool air and cool
savings,” said Cornelius Murphy, Jr., president, SUNY ESF. “At SUNY
ESF, we are committed to energy-efficiency and related technologies
to save energy, lower utility costs and provide a more comfortable
environment for learning.”
Among the new technologies benefiting SUNY ESF is
the first high-temperature carbonate fuel cell to be installed at a
New York college. The 250-kilowatt generator, placed into service
earlier this year, stems from SUNY ESF’s partnership with NYPA,
along with the New York State Energy Research and Development
Authority and others. Producing electricity through a chemical
process, the fuel cell gives off virtually no emissions in meeting
about 17 percent of the campus’s electricity requirements.
SUNY ESF is also benefiting from energy-efficient
lighting installed by NYPA during the mid-1990s under the statewide
utility’s Energy Service Program.
“Governor Pataki’s Executive Order 111 directs New
York State facilities to reduce their energy use by 35 percent by
the end of the decade, compared to 1990 levels, and the Power
Authority has shown its readiness to support this effort, with the
new SUNY ESF chillers the latest example,” said Timothy S. Carey,
NYPA president and chief executive officer. “We’ve invested about $1
billion for projects throughout the Empire State, lowering electric
bills for public facilities, enhancing air quality and reducing
dependence on foreign oil.”
NYPA provided all aspects of project management for
the $1.2 million chiller project, including planning, procurement
and supervision of contractors. The low-cost financing for the
project, which will be paid back by SUNY ESF, in part, from its
annual energy savings of close to $60,000. Additional savings will
accrue from the lower operating and maintenance costs associated
with the high-efficiency cooling equipment. Together with the other
clean and efficient energy technologies, the annual savings to SUNY
ESF amount to $170,000. The measures also reduce annual oil
consumption by 2,500 barrels a year.
NYPA undertook the chiller installations during the
summer and fall of 2005, for the 2006 summer season. The new
chillers, like the obsolete units they replaced are housed in two,
SUNY ESF classroom and lab buildings—Illick Hall and Walters Hall.
At Illick Hall, a 140,870 square-foot building, a
new energy-efficient 250-ton centrifugal chiller replaced the
260-ton absorption chiller, installed in 1966 when the building was
constructed. Also, new chill water pumps, condenser water pumps and
new variable speed drives for the pump motors were installed.
In Walters Hall, an 85,560 square-foot building, a
new energy-efficient 90-ton twin screw compressor chiller replaced
the 90-ton absorption chiller installed in 1969 when that building
was constructed. New chill water pumps and new variable speed
drives for the pump motors were also installed.
In addition to the new chillers and pumps, the
Power Authority upgraded the two buildings’ energy management
systems to optimize the efficiency of the chillers.
NYPA has completed nearly 1,500 clean energy and
energy-efficiency projects at public facilities statewide. These
projects have generated annual utility bill savings of more than $93
million and lowered peak electricity use by the equivalent of
156,000 homes. These initiatives have also reduced annual
greenhouse gas emissions by more than 735,000 tons and dependence on
foreign oil by more than 1.7 million barrels a year.
Photos and caption
|