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ENERGY MANAGEMENTEnergy Management is a permanent strategy that continually evolves in managing the single largest expense of the Facilities Management, campus utilities. These utilities expenses include the purchase of electricity, natural gas, water, and thermal energy. UTHSCSA's energy management mission is to exploit available energy and maintain cost effectiveness without sacrificing utility services, safety, and building occupant comfort. Energy management is achieved on the five campuses through technological and operational improvements which support the diverse energy and comfort requirements of the University's mission. Active and continuous energy management is executed with the understanding that the productivity of the University in its various academic, clinical, and research endeavors has a value which eclipses the cost of energy requirements. Unlike the crises oriented energy conservation mandates of the 1980s, energy management strategies strive to achieve efficiency objectives while being transparent to the UTHSCSA community. The benefits of active and aggressive energy conservation are as follows:
The Utilities Division has two main energy management and control systems (EMCS). The predominant system is Johnson Control's MetaSys. Each of the three campuses in the San Antonio area has a Honeywell Excel 5000 with the EBI (Enterprise Building Integrator) front end. The Harlingen and Laredo campuses utilize the Johnson's system and Edinburg campus employs the Siemens APOGEE Building Automation System (BAS). All systems are direct digital control systems that monitor and control over 8,000 points in 31 of the HSC buildings on the Main Campus and also the four satellite campuses. Each building has a main control panel tied into the EMCS over the University's ethernet. In the event of a network outage or an isolated power outage, each building's control system is capable of operating independently. The EMCS provides a varying degree of building automation depending on the complexity and use of the building. The most common monitoring and control points include air flow, water flow, differential pressure, static pressure, equipment status and alarm notifications, room temperatures, supply and discharge temperatures from air handlers, and HVAC scheduling. The EMCS also allows for trending of space temperatures, utility consumption monitoring, and program enhancements.
NEW FACILITIES The Associate Director participates in many of the inspections. He is also involved in the commissioning process and the warranty period defects to ensure the ultimate success of each new facility.
Building commissioning is usually associated with the start-up of a new facility. However, building commissioning is a permanent and continuous effort, not a one time program. Studies have shown that building retro-commissioning generally realizes a 15% to 30% reduction in energy consumption. The Utilities Division strives to maintain proper air balance of all air handling and exhaust systems. The Division continually adjusts EMCS controls on all equipment to take advantage of energy savings operational strategies. |
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