Category: Tyco Electronics Energy Management Crompton Instruments
Energy Management
Email Tyco Crompton
Tyco Crompton Energy Management - Crompton Instruments
The Cost
The annual energy consumption spend in the UK is approximately £55
billion, with an estimated 20%, or £11 billion, wasted every year. The
advent of the climate change levy on industry, commerce, agriculture and
the public sector dictates the need to reduce energy consumption and
address methods for the better control of energy usage. ‘Energy
Efficiency’ is not new to industry, we all understand the importance of
energy efficient lighting, heating, ventilation, automation etc. and the
benefits intelligent building management systems provide.
The control of facilities’ energy usage, however, has largely been
overlooked. The average organisation can save 20% of its energy bill by
installing simple energy management technology, which for energy
intensive organisations can equate to savings of hundreds of thousands
of pounds per year.
Knowing exactly where, when and how much energy a facility uses is
fundamental to improving overall energy efficiency, and must therefore,
be given the same consideration as the procurement of energy efficient
plant and building services. An energy audit is the first step in the
process of proactively managing energy, of which power measurement
instrumentation plays a key role.
Power Instrumentation
Power instrumentation and ancillary equipment is specifically
designed for the control and reduction of energy consumption, the
monitoring of energy efficiency, and the protection of expensive power
assets. All industrial and commercial applications including power
utilities, distributed generation systems, UPS, AC or DC power supply
and process manufacturing will benefit from effective instrumentation
schemes and monitoring solutions.
Power instrumentation equipment can be installed on individual circuits,
onto production lines or specific machines, into building sand/or
designated environments. Equipment can meter utilities, control energy
consumption, measure power quality, display and communicate chosen
measured electrical parameters, check and adjust protective relay
conditions, control power factor, and monitor and control on site power
generation.
L2 Building Regulations
The Building Regulations 2000 Part L2 states that reasonable
provision shall be made for the conservation of fuel and power in
buildings or parts of buildings by providing sufficient energy meters
and sub-meters to enable owners or accupiers to measure their actual
energy consumption. Reasonable provision for suitable energy consumption
metering must provide sufficient information in a concise and
understandable form, so that the building services can be operated and
maintained, and they use no more energy than is reasonable. For
buildings over 500m2 90% of the annual energy consumption must be
accounted for.

Additional provision of sub metering equipment would be required for
plant items with input powers greater than indicated on the table below.
Remote Monitoring

Remote monitoring of the data collected from many meters can be
downloaded via communication interfaces using various protocols eg:
Modbus, Profibus or Lonworks to a local PC, or integrated into building
management systems for analysis.
The ability to manage metered readings automatically from data loggers
simplifies the whole process of collecting, communicating and analysing
energy usage, and provides an excellent energy management tool across
single and multi site organisations. Analysis of power quality and
energy data presents realistic opportunities to improve energy
efficiency, extend equipment life, increase product yield, reduce costs
and increase profit.
Power Quality
A perfect power supply would be one that is always available, always
within voltage and frequency tolerances, and always free from
distortion. However, power quality problems cost industry £ billions
every year in downtime, and yet only 5% of this is spent on preventative
equipment.
Power instrumentation equipment can help eliminate or reduce the effects
of poor power quality by measuring, monitoring and analysing disruptions
caused by voltage dips, transients, under or over voltage, harmonic
distortion and total loss of supply. Each of these power disturbances
has a different cause. A fault on the supply network may cause short
voltage dips and consequent interruption to production processes, or a
problem on one customers site may cause a transient which affects all
others users on the same substation.
Longer breaks in supply are usually associated with the supplier, but
can also be caused by the failure of on-site equipment, conductors and
connections. Whilst the majority of power quality problems are the
responsibility of the supplier, it is the consumers responsibility to
implement simple energy management technologies which provide the power
quality levels required by his facility.
Total Harmonic Distortion
Harmonic problems are almost always caused by the consumers’
equipment and installation practices. Harmonic distortion is caused by
the high use of non-linear load equipment such as computer power
supplies, electronic ballasts, and variable speed drives etc, which
create high current flow with harmonic frequency components.
Harmonic distortion is caused by the introduction of waveforms at
frequencies in multiplies of the fundamental ie: 3rd harmonic is 3x the
fundamental frequency/150Hz. Total harmonic distortion is the ratio of
true RMS values of the harmonic components to the total RMS of the
waveform. The harmonic profiles of installed equipment can guide the
system designer in determining practical harmonic range of a measurement
instrument.
The economic effects of harmonic distortion to power quality are
dramatically shorter equipment lifetimes, reduced energy efficiency and
a susceptibility to nuisance tripping. The costs of supply interruption
are high, however caused, resulting in costly data, disruption of
process manufacturing and failure of telecommunications facilities etc.
Therefore, continuous measurement and monitoring of power quality is
critical to protect expensive power assets and avoidance of system
shutdowns.
Conclusion
Statistics state that up to 20% energy savings can be achieved with
accurate monitoring and awareness of energy usage profile and reduction
of waste. To identify cost saving opportunities it is essential to build
an accurate facilities’ energy profile and install appropriate
measurement, control and protection instrumentation equipment. The use
of power measurement and control instrumentation reduces energy costs,
monitors energy efficiency, prolongs equipment lifetime, increases
profitability and provides long term measurable performance improvement
for business.
|

Email this company
Tyco Electronics UK Ltd
Energy Division
Freebournes Road
Witham
Essex
CM8 3AH
Tel : 0870 870 7500
Fax : 0879 240 5287 |