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We have mostly looked at solar, says Lyn Peters,
Environmental Services Manager at the Fresno Unified School
District, but not that seriously. Weve investigated
it in the previous five years, but solar energy requires a
lot of space. To have solar rays, you need a lot of acreage
or rooftops or some other space to keep them away from kids
playing.
So when an engineer approached the district with the concept
of cogeneration systems in 2000, it seemed like a good idea.
The project involved three high schoolsHoover, Sunnyside,
and McLane. The cogens installed on each campus to produce
electricity to the schools grids were reciprocating
engine generatorslow NOx internal combustion engines
that run on natural gas.
Before the installation, the district had a standard power
set-upelectricity and gas supplied by Pacific Gas &
Electric (PG&E), and gas by SPURR. The only cost savings
they had in place were some remodels and upgrades in their
lighting and HVAC systems. The idea was that the cogen system
would provide the baseload power that the utility required
per day. This would help the district manage their purchase
power costs by limiting the demand costs the utilities charged
on peak power, says Pat Hale, national sales manager
at Yazaki Energy. In addition, it allowed them to recover
the heat that would normally go out of the exhaust pipe when
the generators burned the fuel, as well as recover the heat
from the water flowing through the engines to cool them.
Two of the schools, Hoover and Sunnyside, have basically
the same set up, explains Strategic Mechanicals
Lonnie Petty, the project manager who was also the lead on
this project. They each have three Tecogen gas generators
(also known as Tecos) that produce electricity to the school
grid. The waste heat is taken from the Tecos and the pools
are heated as the first priority. The second priority
is to heat, at Hoover only, the domestic water with whatever
heat is available. Then the energy thats left over from
the pools is used to supply heat to the campuses themselves.
At Hoover and Sunnyside, along with the three Tecos are one
pool heat exchanger and two chillers. At the third and smaller
school, McLane, there are two Tecos and one chiller. All the
chillers are Yazaki absorption chillers, models WFC-SH30 and
WFC-SH20, which provide both cooling and heating. All of the
Tecos are 75 KW at 460 V.
As far as cooling for the schools is concerned,
says Petty, the waste heat from the Tecos is run through
the Yazaki absorption chillers and that heat generates chilled
water for the campus air conditioning system. The chillers
provide about 50 tons of free cooling this way. The
smaller school, McLane, however, only uses a single 30 ton
chiller. Sunnyside and Hoover use 50 tons each, accomplished
by using both a 20-ton and a 30-ton chiller.
The Main Players
Once the project was ready to roll forward, the plan was that
the district would provide the engines for three cogeneration
plants. The consulting engineer then specified what size chillers
he wanted, how the wiring and plumbing would be done, and
other such details of the design and installation. Once the
specs were written, the district put out a public bid.
The winning team for this project included sales engineers
from Norman S. Wright Co., Lonnie Petty of Strategic Mechanical
as both the mechanical engineer and the lead, and Chuck Shinneman
of Building Systems Engineering as the consulting engineer.
Shinneman designed the plants, Petty was in charge of all
phases of installation, and the Norman S. Wright engineers
coordinated and facilitated activity and communication among
the above parties, Yazaki, and the district.
Worth the Cost
So what motivated the district to go with this project? The
short answer is long-term savings. After the engineer showed
them how much they would save and how much the local utility
would give as a rebate towards the cost of the cogen, they
thought the benefits would mitigate the initial costs.
The total cost for the project was $4 million, so the districts
decision to follow through was obviously well thought out.
This wasnt something where, at the time, they
said, This seems like a good idea so lets jump
on it quick before someone else does! says Hale.
It was a forcefully measured process that should yield
very good results because of the time it took to plan it.
There was quite a long period of research and design integration
that occurred before installation. It took about two
years to develop a design and plans for bidding.
Cost was a big concern, shares Peters, but
the payback will come in about four years. Any payback under
five years is good, especially considering the increasing
cost of electricity in California. The funding was attained
mainly through a Certificate of Participation loan, a low
interest loan available in California thats usually
granted for large equipment purchases. The engineers and cogens
were paid for separately from the installation itself.
I think it took great vision on the districts
part to take this approach to powering the schools,
says Hale. From an environmental standpoint the cogen
systems have great value, but they also help provide the very
best facilities for the students. And the project helps protect
the operating cost that taxpayers incur to maintain these
facilities.
Thinking It Through
Peters does not recall anyone at the district being opposed
to the idea of using the cogens on the campuses. I think
there was a general reluctance at first, on every level,
she elaborates, that had to be overcome because of the
money situation. Questions had to be answered, and the first
one was why is this economical? But I dont really remember
anyone being against it. It was presented over a period of
time and during that time questions came up. They werent
negative questions, just information-based, like how
does this work?, etc. And as the idea developed, everyone
was slowly for it. It may have also helped that the
technology itself has actually been around for quite some
time, and as part of their research, the school spoke with
businesses that have already been using the same cogens in
similar applications.
Before installation, the district understood that their decision
was a commitment, and that the power systems would have to
be monitored regularly. This is not something you just
put in, walk away from, and treat like windmills, where the
wind will keep blowing them around and around until an eagle
flies into them, says Peters. They require and
will continue to require a lot of TLC to keep them economical.
The Technical Lowdown
In addition to the economic advantages the integrated building
systems provide, they allow the school to recoverby
means of heat exchangersthe heat that would normally
go out of the exhaust pipe (when the generators burn the fuel),
as well as the heat of the water flowing through the engines
to cool them. This means the pools are now heated with the
rescued heat instead of additional energy that would have
previously been needed from the utility.
The pools are heated by using Yazaki single-effect
absorption chillers, explains Hale. Instead of
being powered by electrical energy or gas or thermal fuels,
these are actually powered by hot water. So the heat that
has been produced for baseload power needs at the schools
is now being used where it is needed in the most appropriate
and most economical way.
When the chillers are satisfied and dont need
to run anymore, elaborates Hale, that energy can
then be diverted to the pool. When it makes more sense to
provide cooling, the energy drives the generators andinstead
of dumping it into the atmosphereits recovered
and used to reduce the costs of the building. So theyre
burning the match twice, so to speak.
More Than One Hat
Atypical to most installations of this kind, the project manager,
Petty, also acted as the GC on this project. He came into
the picture after the project engineer designed the plants.
Its much easier to coordinate the other subcontractors
this way, begins Petty. Since we coordinate it,
were always thinking about the efficiency of the system.
The building, slab, and block work is all incidental to the
mechanical work, so when were the lead, it makes it
easier for us to coordinate the subcontractors.
Petty, who has experience being a GC in this way, notices
that other subs like working for another sub. Thats
because we schedule a little better than some of the generals
do. So many of the jobs in this project were mechanical in
nature, so it was easier this way. Most GCs dont really
understand what the mechanical or electrical controls are
in a building, and the controls in this case are very sophisticated.
So its much easier for coordination purposes. We could
also work directly with the owner, which meant one less layer
of bureaucracy.
Laying It All Out
On all three schools, a block building houses the Tecos and
the heat-reclaiming materials. They also contain cooling towers
and a radiatora Young Touchstonethat takes the
waste heat to the atmosphere when the Tecos cant utilize
the waste heat.
They are at a location that is as close to the pools
as we could get them and still coordinate with available space
on campus, says Shinneman.
For all three schools, the waste heat from the swimming pool
provides space heating and cooling to the central plant heating
and cooling systems (which goes to the campus rooms), and
they have whats called a two-pipe changeover system.
This means there are two pipes that run around the campus,
says Shinneman. Whether the campus wants cooling or
heating depends on the temperature of the water in them, which
depends on the season or time of day. So we have the capability
of providing either hot water for heating or chilled water
for cooling, in addition to heating the swimming pools.
One of the outstanding aspects of this project is the efficiency
and versatility of the Tecos. They provide up to four thermal
sources for the schoolsheat for pool, space heating,
space cooling, and domestic hot water. Often cogens used in
similar applications supply two or sometimes three sources.
This is something I havent done before in similar
configurations, says Shinneman. To add the cooling,
thats not common.
The cooling was added to get a greater utilization of the
available thermal energyto get more bang for the buck,
so to speak. The big problem in cogeneration is finding
a home for the thermal energy. The PG&E requirement for
getting less expensive gas is 42.5 % of overall efficiency.
If we do that we save about 20 cents a therm for gas, which
is not insignificant. So we can get the benefits of the less
expensive gas this way, says Shinneman.
Many times thermal energy cant be utilized this well.
One reason is the owners threshold for return
on investment. How many years of energy savings is it going
to take to pay back the capital? A lot of owners have mandates
by their boards, or whoever, that they dont want to
have any longer than a few years. And the district, being
an institution, will own its facility forever. So because
the school was willing and able to have a longer payback time,
that allowed us to spend a little more money to take advantage
of things we might not have been able to otherwise.
Installing the Goods
All in all, the installation pretty much went as expected.
The fact that the engineers did a lot of planning beforehand
probably had a lot to do with itand the fact that the
owner was good to work with. A lot of the piping was
prefabricated, so there was very little field welding and
assembly time at the job sites, says Greg Genelin, a
service manager at Strategic Mechanical who worked alongside
Petty during the installation.
Once the buildings were built and the equipment arrived,
the time it took to pipe these buildings was two to three
weeks, says Petty. This is very quick. We were
working on two of them at the same time, so we had crews that
were set up to go from one school to the next. One crew was
setting up equipment and the other crew was installing piping.
For this project there was a lot of underground piping needed
to hook into the schools infrastructure. On one of the
sites we utilized approximately .25-mile of pre-insulated
pipe to get over to the pool heating system. We had a crew
set up as the underground piping crew, and they would take
care of all that.
Petty estimated that the installation took about six months
of actual working on the job. We had a certain time
frame and we went way over it. For one thing, it took a while
to get some of the equipment. Then at the end of installation,
it was realized that there was a special breakerrequired
in all PG&E installationsthat needed to be installed
on a cogen facility. The engineers were not informed of this
until the project was finished, so they had to go find the
switch gear and panel, and the district had to buy the necessary
equipment to install it.
Shinneman attributes a lot of the installation success to
thorough engineering on the part of all involved, and the
fact that there was fairly good documentation to begin with.
Probably what helps us is that weve done a fair
amount of these over the years, dating back to the mid 80s,
says Shinneman. Knowing that theres all these
potential gotchas, we really coordinated with all the vendors
and had them review the documents. Weve had good vendors,
as well.
The Utility Factor
The Tecos have only been running for several months now. We
had the construction done almost a year ago, by April of 2004,
and since that time we had been trying to get PG&E to
sign off on this, says Petty.
PG&E has certain guidelines not spelled out in
the prints, says Genelin, so my advice to anyone
who is installing one of these systems is to find out from
the power company if you need to reduce your gas load or electric
load at a certain time during the day. Youll also want
to find out what kinds of rebates they have and follow out
their systems, as well as determine the exact interface utility
equipment required.
Considering the fact that the PG&E account with the Fresno
Unified School District has been considerably shaved down
by the use of the cogens, the aforementioned oversight on
the part of PG&E may seem a little suspicious. However,
even with the loss of revenue, PG&E has been nothing but
gracious to the district in general. So it appears that the
reason for the lack of communication was simply due to the
fact that the utility is still figuring out how to best manage
the installation of cogen technology. PG&E is still
learning how to deal with all the bureaucracy and details
that come with installing these, adds Petty.
Ironically, to get a rebate, a business purchasing cogens
needs to go through their local utility. PG&E has
been as helpful as they can possible be, says Peters,
Obviously they would rather see people buying their
energy from them, but they have never laid out any restrictions
about it or been impolite. We are their biggest account in
the area, so they know they havent lost a customer just
because were using less electricity in the summer time.
Looking Back
One of the biggest challenges Strategic Mechanical came across
during installation was the small mechanical room sizes. We
had to maintain 40 small spaces, says Genelin. Maintaining
electrical and access clearance for the motors themselves
was almost impossible. But they pulled through nonetheless.
They also found that the quick reaction time of the controls
was difficult to coordinate with the staging on and off of
the Tecogens. If we were to design one of these systems,
we would have put in a storage tank so the system didnt
react so fast, starts Petty. Right now you have
reaction times of seconds, and control valves dont react
that fast. This means you can exceed the maximum temperature
that your reclaim equipment will allow. So if you have something
that would provide you with a little more operating time in
between sequence changes, like a storage tank, it would be
easier to control.
They also would have loved to have seen another heat exchanger
added to pick up the waste heat. These plants are feeding
so many different kinds of mouthswith cooling, heating,
domestic hot water, and heating for the pools and electricityand
all these things vary as to when they are on and off, or whether
they are happening at the same time. All these different scenarios
create the need for a pretty high level of control coordination.
And that was definitely higher in this project than Ive
seen in the past, says Petty.
Better Than Expected
Although the power systems have only been online for a few
months, theyve been running splendidly and non-stop
the entire time. Theyve passed all tests, such as air-quality
tests and those run by the utility to fulfill electrical safety
requirements. In other words, so far so good. Our original
expectations were that they would heat the pools to 80 degrees
[F] and that we could keep them on in the winter time and
summer time at whatever temperature was desired, says
Peters. Then, if there was any heat left over in the
summer, we could cool the buildings. In reality, we not only
heated the pools from coldfrom below 50 degrees [F]
to temperatures of 80 degrees [F] in less than a weekbut
the excess energy that would normally just go out the stack
is instead used to heat the water in the HVAC loop and heating
of the classrooms. So its sort of an unintended consequence.
And the systems have far exceeded our expectations.
Shinneman notes that the quality of the workmanship was particularly
outstanding on this project. The mechanical contractor
did an extremely good job. Its a real showpiece. And
the tradespeople who worked on the project, they all really
knew what they were doing. They were all professionals and
the project reflects that.
AMY SORKIN is an LA-based freelance journalist and copywriter
who specializes in marketing communications. Her articles
and profiles have appeared in over 30 publications including
Marie Claire, Woman's Day, and The LA Weekly.
DE - July/August 2005
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