<<

AUGUST 21- 23, 2018 • CLEVELAND, OHIO Look Who’s Talking: Buildings and The Grid Roundtable Wednesday, August 22, 2018 10:30am - Noon Look Who’s Talking: Buildings and The Grid Roundtable

Panelists: Moderator:

Asim Haque Janice Berman Douglas Rath Gregg Fischer Clay Nesler David Nemtzow Chairman, Pacific Gas & Electric Marriott Tishman Speyer Johnson Controls U.S. Department Public Utilities International of Commission of Ohio David Nemtzow US DOE Building Technologies Office Moving Towards the Grid of the Future Energy Efficiency can be a Key Responsive Grid Resource

EE removes loads from the grid, reducing energy supply required

. Defers or reduces investments in new electric generation capacity or the T&D system . Reduces peak load shaping demand and the strain placed on existing T&D infrastructure The Modern – and thus Connected – Building Grid-interactive Efficient Buildings (GEBs)

Smart Lowers total electricity demand Flattens Flexibly aligns with variable GEB renewables (considers load net of renewables) Connected Efficient Examples of grid-interactive efficient technologies

Passive Active Connected Performance LED Lighting Lighting Daylighting Optimized Lighting: Controls • Minimized Energy Consumption Lighting • High Occupant Comfort • Low Ability to Provide Grid Services

Phase H2O-Based Controllable Change Thermal Multi-Speed Optimized Comfort: Materials Storage HVAC • Minimized Energy Consumption Storage/ • High Occupant storage-like Comfort • High Ability to Provide Grid Services Chairman Haque Public Utilities Commission of Ohio PowerForward: Ohio's Grid Modernization Initiative August 22nd, 2018

Asim Z. Haque, Chairman Public Utilities Commission of Ohio Innovation PowerForward

Enhance Customer Experience Collaborative Process

Phase One: April 2017 A Glimpse of the Future

Exploring Phase Two: July 2017 Technologies

Ratemaking Phase Three: March 2018 and Regulation Janice Berman Pacific Gas & Electric Better Buildings August 22, 2018

PG&E’s Grid Integration and Innovation Mission Design, test, and integrate innovative solutions to accelerate PG&E’s transition to the sustainable grid of the future Electric Grid Evolution

The grid has operated by transporting electricity in one direction, from generation through transmission and distribution lines to customers. Times are changing.

Power Plants Electric Grid Customers

Nuclear Power Plants Utility-scale Distributed Transmission Lines Storage Storage Generators

Smart Grid functionality restoresRooftop Solarthe

Distribution balance Hydro Power Plants Substations Plug-in Electric Vehicles

Wind Farms

Solar Farms / Power Plants Distributed Energy Resources are Changing Grid Operations

October 2013 October 2016

4MW Battery Output October 2016 A Tale of 2 Buildings A Tale of 2 Buildings The Changing Grid

CAISO Net Load --- 2012 through 2020 27,000

25,000

23,000 2012

21,000 2013 2014 2015 19,000 MW 2016 2017 17,000 2018 2019 15,000 2020

13,000

11,000 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 PG&E’s Huron Substation Reverse flow: February - October 10

5

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 -5

-10

-15 Bank loading (MW) loading Bank 10am-4pm -20 4MW load increase -25

25 Peak load: June & July

6pm-12am 20 2MW load decrease 15

10 Bank loading (MW) loading Bank 5

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 Douglas Rath Marriott International Smart Hotels and the Grid Smart Hotels Technologies Integration

HVAC

Advanced Lighting Fire System Controls

Water Submeters Sensors User Interface

Locks and Key Management

Smart Thermostats Integrated Schedules CCx monitoring Plug Load Management PM systems Smart Hotels & - Desired State Smart Meters

HVAC Renewable Generation

Advanced Lighting Fire System Controls

CHP

Water Submeters Sensors User Interface

Locks and Key Management

Smart Thermostats Integrated Schedules CCx monitoring Plug Load Management PM systems Smart Hotels & Smart Grid- Actual State Smart Meters

HVAC Renewable Generation

Fire System Advanced Lighting Microgrids Controls

CHP

Water Submeters Sensors User Interface

Locks and Key Management

Smart Thermostats Integrated Schedules CCx monitoring Plug Load Management PM systems Gregg Fischer Tishman Speyer

Tishman Speyer: Gregg Fischer, PE

• Director of Energy Systems • Sustainability + Utilities @ Tishman Speyer • Oversee building and energy systems for the US portfolio (55,000,000 sqft) • Based out of Rockefeller Center in NYC (global HQ) • Focus: • Building Automation • Energy Monitoring/Management • Fire Alarm • Security/Card Access • Lighting Controls • Energy Supply Contracts • Tenant Billing Systems

29 Real-Time Energy Monitoring by Owner

30 Time of Use/Day Delivery Pricing

31 Storage Relief Tariff? 100 High Cost On-Peak Power

Low Cost Off-Peak Power

75 Melt Ice

50

Make D

cooling load, % cooling % load, of design Ice E 25 M Chiller A N D 0 6 a.m. Start End

32 Clay Nesler Johnson Controls Look Who's Talking: Buildings and the Grid Roundtable

Clay Nesler

Look Who’s Talking: Buildings and The Grid Roundtable

Panelists: Moderator:

Asim Haque Janice Berman Douglas Rath Gregg Fischer Clay Nesler David Nemtzow Chairman, Pacific Gas & Electric Marriott Tishman Speyer Johnson Controls U.S. Department Public Utilities International of Energy Commission of Ohio