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Task 10: We identify and prioritize energy performance improvement opportunities, and have processes in place to update them.

Detailed Guidance: Improvement Opportunities

  1. Develop and document a methodology and criteria for how your organization will identify, prioritize, and update energy performance improvement opportunities.
  2. Apply the methodology and criteria you developed to identify, prioritize, and update energy performance improvement opportunities.
  3. Update the list of prioritized improvement opportunities at specific intervals and when major changes in sites, equipment, systems, or energy-using processes take place.

Task 10 Guidance Version: v18.10.01.02
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Opportunities for energy performance improvement are a key component of the energy review. Energy performance improvement opportunities are identified by examining current practice and determining how it can be improved. This process can bring to light the potential for improved operating practices, equipment and system improvements, and advanced technologies that would benefit your organization.

Opportunities are prioritized in accordance with your organization’s criteria to optimize the use of resources.

This guidance is relevant to Section 6.3 d) of the ISO 50001:2018 standard.


Task 10 Guidance Version: v18.10.01.02
Creative Commons License
The creative commons license is applicable only to the technical content found in the "Getting it Done", "Task Overview", "Full Description", and "Decarbonization" tabs. The creative commons license does not extend to the 50001 Ready Navigator software or other resources.

Identification of energy performance improvement opportunities is the responsibility of the energy team. Input from all employees, as well as from external resources, should be solicited and considered as appropriate.

  • Reduced energy consumption
  • Decreased operating and energy costs
  • Improved operating efficiency
  • Environmental improvements

One common method for identifying opportunities is an energy assessment. Energy assessments are an excellent method for collecting data for the energy review (see Task 8 Energy Data Collection and Analysis) and provide a vital source of information for energy management planning, including identification of energy improvement opportunities. Assessments yield a “snapshot” of your organization’s current energy performance and offer a list of quantified improvement measures. Assessments can be conducted by the energy manager, members of the energy team or continual improvement teams (e.g., Kaizen teams), corporate energy specialists, external consultants, utility personnel, or university experts.

The types of opportunities identified depend on the scope and intent of the assessment, but they may address energy purchasing improvements, better operating and maintenance practices, and renovation or replacement of existing energy equipment. Elements of an energy assessment include the following:

  • Determining the scope of an assessment, including buildings, systems, and utility metering
  • Reviewing any past energy-efficiency projects to help focus the scope of the assessment
  • Reviewing past assessments and determining additional or updated information requirements
  • Developing the energy assessment plan based on the identified scope
  • Conducting the assessment
  • Recording the findings of the assessment(s)

Many sources, including national governments, provide a variety of resources for identifying energy savings opportunities in specific energy systems, including a variety of online system assessment tools. System analysis tools are available for compressed air systems, fans, motors, pumps, process heating systems, steam systems, and industrial buildings. As an example, the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) System Assessment standards also provide guidance on energy system assessments. ASME guidance is available on sites and specific energy systems related to both industrial and commercial organizations.

Personnel working for or on behalf of your organization are generally useful in defining energy opportunities not discovered during an energy assessment. These personnel may be closely associated with energy equipment or processes and may uncover unique opportunities because of their experience. Using this type of asset offers the potential to discover unconventional improvements and engage personnel who otherwise may not be actively involved in energy management.

Energy assessments are very effective but can be expensive. Other approaches to defining energy performance improvement opportunities are described in the “Learn More” link directly below.

The following sources can help to identify energy performance improvement opportunities:

  • Employee suggestions
  • Utility representatives
  • Service technicians
  • Commercial building standards
  • Industrial sector standards
  • Equipment standards
  • Government organizations
  • Equipment vendors

The optional Playbook worksheet can be helpful in finding and using other methods to identify opportunities. It identifies several different methods for spotting opportunities, as well as suggested contact points and possible outcomes of applying the method.

The next step in energy planning is to prioritize the opportunities. The choice of prioritization method is up to the organization; however, it must be systematic and ongoing. It can be difficult and time-consuming for your organization to process every potential improvement idea; prioritizing them based on defined criteria helps you focus resources on the most practical opportunities.

The following activities will help you develop and apply criteria for prioritizing opportunities:

  • Get the right people together.
  • Review relevant organizational information.
  • Determine criteria.
  • Develop tools or techniques for applying criteria.
  • Apply criteria to prioritize opportunities.

Get the right people together. Involve individuals from different functions and levels within your organization in developing the criteria for prioritizing your organization’s opportunities. Different points of view will ensure consideration of a wide range of potential factors. If the energy team already has adequate representation from across the various functions and levels, then no additions to the team may be needed. On the other hand, this can be a time to involve other personnel who may bring specific knowledge or experience useful to the process of setting the criteria for prioritizing opportunities. This could include, for example, personnel knowledgeable about your organization’s capital planning or project justification processes.

Review relevant organizational information. The energy team should gather and review organizational information that may affect the criteria and the approach to be used in prioritizing opportunities. In addition, it may be helpful for the energy team to be aware of any existing risk assessment processes already in use by your organization, and a clear understanding of your organization’s safety and environmental risk tolerance.

Relevant organizational information could include:

  • organizational business strategies.
  • current hurdles or financial requirements for proposed capital projects.
  • operations and maintenance (O&M) projects.
  • other types of resource or funding requests.
  • production or market forecasts.
  • corporate requirements.

Determine criteria. When selecting criteria, consider the organizational information you collected, and develop criteria that will address your organization’s needs and requirements.

Examples of criteria include:

  • estimated energy or cost savings.
  • cost of opportunity implementation.
  • return on investment, internal rate of return, net present value, and life cycle cost.
  • ease of opportunity implementation.
  • length of implementation period.
  • possible safety, health, and environmental issues.
  • maintenance impact.
  • production or operational impact.

You determine the type and number of criteria to be used. One or two criteria may be sufficient, or many may be required. You also determine whether scoring or rating scales for each criterion will be established and applied (e.g., a range of energy savings that are acceptable). If only one criterion is to be used, a simple go / no go limit may be adequate. Multiple criteria typically require a process for determining the relative importance of each criteria and how they will be evaluated (see the next activity).

Remember to maintain documented information on the criteria that will be used to prioritize the opportunities. This ensures the criteria are clearly understood and uniformly applied. The optional Playbook worksheet can give you some ideas on how criteria can be documented.

Develop tools or techniques for applying criteria. You now have developed criteria for prioritizing opportunities. This ensures that your organization’s resources are focused on the most viable set of potential energy performance improvement projects. Developing tools or techniques to apply the criteria can make the process of prioritization easier.

If your organization already has the tools to prioritize potential projects, it may make sense to use (or adapt) those same tools for prioritizing energy performance improvement opportunities.

Typically, the criteria used to evaluate projects will have different levels of importance. If the criteria are not equally important, then the energy team should determine the relative weighting.

As an example, within your organization, estimated cost savings may be more important than the ease of implementing the opportunity. In this case, cost savings might be weighted twice as heavily as the ease of implementation criteria.

Apply criteria to prioritize opportunities. Reorder the list of energy opportunities from highest to lowest priority. Use a “reality check” to evaluate the prioritized list; that is, ensure the list makes sense from perspectives that may not be directly reflected by the criteria, and that the opportunities seem to fall in line with the organization’s expectations. If one or more of the opportunities appear to not make sense, it may be necessary to reevaluate the criteria or the weightings used for the criteria. Consider the following questions:

  • Does the prioritized list make sense with regard to your organization’s overall business objectives and plans?
  • Are there criteria that have not been considered that have skewed the prioritization?
  • Do the weights reflect your organization’s priorities?
  • Are there any planned organizational or other changes that will affect the prioritized list?

As new energy opportunities are identified, ensure they are prioritized and included in the list.

As a component of the energy review, the prioritized opportunities for energy performance improvement must be updated at specific intervals and when major changes in sites, equipment, systems, or energy-using processes take place. The specific interval for the updating is defined by your organization. The interval chosen can be the same as that defined for the energy review as a whole, or as defined for other components of the energy review, or defined as an interval specific only to the updating of the energy opportunities. The minimum interval typically chosen by organizations is at least once a year.

Ensuring that energy opportunities are updated when major changes are made should be integrated with the updating of all components of the energy review in response to major changes in sites, equipment, systems, and energy-using processes. Such changes can present new opportunities for energy performance improvement, can negate some energy opportunities, or can affect the prioritization of the energy opportunities. The best approach for appropriate updating is to ensure that the relevant personnel (e.g., energy manager, energy team leader, one or more members of the energy team) are included in the planning for the types of major changes mentioned above. To be effective for the EnMS, change management processes must give attention to the effects of the changes on the energy situation of the organization, including the energy review and all its components.

Are the identified improvement opportunities implemented or moving toward implementation?  If not, take steps to get these opportunities on track.

Review and update priorities as needed.  Review the methodology and criteria for identifying, ranking, and selecting opportunities, and update as needed.  For example, do you have any new GHG emissions reduction goals that may impact the setting of priorities?

Energy improvement opportunities should not be selected randomly. There should be a methodology in place.

You should be able to show an auditor the logical approach, criteria, and results of energy improvement project selection.


Task 10 Guidance Version: v18.10.01.02
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The creative commons license is applicable only to the technical content found in the "Getting it Done", "Task Overview", "Full Description", and "Decarbonization" tabs. The creative commons license does not extend to the 50001 Ready Navigator software or other resources.
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Identifying and prioritizing opportunities for energy performance improvement is a key component of the energy review process. In adding energy-related GHG emissions reduction opportunities to this process, your organization may want to consider that:

  1. Identified energy performance improvement opportunities have an estimate of energy-related GHG emissions reduction associated with them.
  2. Opportunities are identified for energy-related GHG emissions types (i.e. Scope 1, 2, or 3) included in the scope and boundaries of the EnMS.
  3. Energy-related GHG emissions are included in the opportunity prioritization process.

The choice of prioritization method is up to the organization; however, it must be documented, systematic, and ongoing. When adding energy-related GHG emissions to your criteria, you should develop a process for determining the relative importance of energy-related GHG emissions to the other criteria which will depend largely on the magnitude and speed of GHG emissions reduction your organization seeks to achieve.

It is important to maintain documented information on the criteria that will be used to prioritize the opportunities. This ensures the criteria are clearly understood, uniformly applied, and can be modified if priorities change in the future.

If you do not have an existing 50001 Ready-based EnMS and want to build one that also helps your organization manage energy-related GHG emissions, you should follow the guidance in the “Full Description” tab keeping the following in mind:

  1. Identify energy performance improvement opportunities.  Identify both energy performance improvement opportunities and energy-related GHG emissions reduction opportunities.
  2. Establish criteria for prioritizing opportunities.  When developing your criteria and processes for prioritizing opportunities, include energy-related GHG emissions as one of the criteria.  Keep in mind your organization’s GHG-related objectives and targets set in Task 12 Objectives and Targets.
  3. Apply criteria for prioritizing opportunities.  Ensure that any tools or techniques developed for applying the criteria include energy-related GHG emissions.
  4. Implement processes to update the prioritized energy opportunities.  Ensure that your process for updating energy opportunities takes into consideration that the relative importance of energy-related GHG emissions in your organization can change and how that might affect the criteria for prioritizing opportunities.

If you have an existing 50001 Ready-based EnMS and want to adapt it to manage energy-related GHG emissions, you should:

  1. Review your existing energy performance improvement opportunities.  Review your existing list of energy performance improvement opportunities and quantify their energy-related GHG emissions reduction potential.  Include which type of GHG emissions (i.e.  Scope 1, 2, or 3 emissions) the opportunity addresses.  Assess if the current list aptly covers your organization's GHG emissions reduction opportunities. 
  2. Update your criteria for prioritizing opportunities.  Update your criteria for prioritizing opportunities to include energy-related GHG emissions.  Keep in mind your organization's GHG-related objectives and targets set in Task 12 Objectives and Targets.
  3. Apply criteria for prioritizing opportunities.  Apply the updated criteria to your list of opportunities.  Keep in mind that adding energy-related GHG emissions to your criteria and process may significantly change the priority of projects.
  4. Review your processes to update the prioritized energy opportunities.  The relative importance of energy-related GHG emissions may change over time, so have a process in place to adjust the weighting of GHG emissions when prioritizing opportunities.

The guidance for this task is from the following sections from the ERP Framework: ERP Framework Introduction and Milestones 2, 3, 4, and 5.

The ERP Framework guides organizations to systematically develop and evaluate scenarios at the portfolio level and proactively plan for the resources needed to complete actions in their buildings. This approach moves organizations from implementing individual ad hoc projects toward a path of transforming and improving their entire portfolio in a holistic and systematic fashion.

With ambitious GHG emissions reduction goals, most or all buildings within a portfolio will likely need to implement some level of emissions reduction measures. However, organizations are often challenged with how to understand the magnitude of the emissions reduction opportunities in a large portfolio of buildings without conducting assessments at each building. The purpose of this task is to categorize the buildings within the portfolio to identify representative buildings that cover the diversity of building types and systems. Start by defining the key characteristics that differentiate your buildings. Next, use these characteristics to categorize buildings in the portfolio. You will then selects a sample of buildings for decarbonization audits that represent the different categories. The results from the representative building audits are scaled across similar buildings to estimate emissions reduction impacts and develop potential scenarios at the portfolio level. Vehicle fleets should also be included as a portfolio-wide measure. (Milestone 2) Please refer to the full ERP Framework for more information on District Heat Studies, Green Power Procurement, and Fleet Emissions.

After categorizing building portfolios, the organization will move forward with GHG emissions reduction audits on the representative buildings as described above and assess additional measures at the portfolio level, such as green power procurement. The Emissions Reduction Audits serve three main purposes:

  1. Define packages of emissions reduction measures (ERMs) to implement that achieve targets for a building.
  2. Define measure packages for each category of buildings in the portfolio to support scaling audit results across the portfolio.
  3. Define individual measures to apply through portfolio-wide policies and requirements.

These actions will allow the organization to select ERMs to implement immediately. While emissions reduction audits of representative buildings may not capture unique opportunities at each building in the portfolio, they will identify the appropriate strategies to apply within each building category. Furthermore, the results from these audits can be scaled across the portfolio to estimate emissions reductions as described further in Task 13 (Action Plans for Continual Improvement). Other approaches might be used when developing emissions reduction estimates (including a comparison to benchmarks like ENERGY STAR or automated building-stock analysis). Emissions reduction audits can support these approaches by facilitating the rapid implementation of identified emissions reduction opportunities and increasing the accuracy of the analysis. (Milestone 2)

The emissions reduction audit results in the following types of measures that are combined into packages of measures that meet the building’s GHG reduction target (Milestone 3):

  • Energy efficiency
  • Electrification (e.g., using heat pumps rather than
  • electric resistance heating)
  • Fugitive emissions (e.g., mitigating refrigerant leaks; use of low-GWP refrigerants)
  • On-site renewable energy

Further, building audits and portfolio assessments will result in measures that can be implemented as standard practice across the portfolio. Table below contains examples of portfolio-level practices to be considered. (Milestone 3)

Portfolio Level Policies and Requirements

Policy/Requirement

Description

Renovation/refresh requirements

Renovation and refresh requirements that incorporate energy efficiency, deep retrofits, and electrification. For example, include LED lighting and advanced lighting control into organizational guidelines.

Equipment purchasing and upgrade requirements

Performance standards that promote efficiency and limit the installation of new fossil fuel combustion equipment whenever feasible

Operations and maintenance (O&M) practices

Requirements for building operations with a decarbonization focus for internal O&M staff and external contractors

New construction design specifications

Design specifications that minimize or eliminate emissions generated from new construction, such as energy use or GHG intensity targets, a net zero energy target, and all-electric buildings.

Building automation system upgrades

Common sequences and setpoints for building automation systems (BAS) and a plan to modernize the BAS

Energy management and information systems (EMIS)

Requirements for tracking, visualizing, and analyzing energy, carbon, and BAS data from disparate sources

Grid integration

Policies that promote responsiveness to electric grid conditions, including demand response and energy storage measures

Low global warming potential (GWP) refrigerants

Policies to monitor refrigerant use, identify leaks, and phase-in low-GWP refrigerants

Vehicle purchasing requirements

Requirements for electric or alternative fuel vehicles based on review of organizational needs

Staffing

Staffing policies to effectively implement the ERP, including energy management, sustainability, facilities, and procurement

On-site solar screening

Screening for on-site solar opportunities through a portfolio-level review

Green lease policy

Organizational policies for green leases (new and renewals) that align financial benefits of sustainability initiatives to both parties

Training policies

Ensuring that current personnel have ongoing training to maintain and enable further GHG emissions reductions

By developing and analyzing multiple scenarios, an organization can compare the costs and benefits of each scenario and select a decarbonization pathway that best meets their needs. (Milestone 4) After developing multiple emissions reduction scenarios, an organization will assess which scenario best meets its organizational needs and defines a final emissions reduction pathway. The evaluation criteria defined in the Emissions Reduction Plan scope of work are applied at this phase to determine the relative merits of each scenario (see examples in table below). (Milestone 5)

Evaluation Criteria

Evaluation Criteria

Description

Economic Evaluation

Assess the comparative economic performance between scenarios, taking into consideration the financial criteria used in the organization (lifecycle cost, net present value, return on investment, simple payback).

Emissions Reductions

Compare the emissions reduction potential of each scenario, including the certainty of meeting emissions reduction targets.

Operational Impacts

Assess the comparative impact to facilities operations, including maintainability, disruption, and system complexity.

Occupant Benefits

Identify whether certain scenarios may provide additional benefits to building occupants, including health and wellness.

Resilience

Assess which scenarios will best position the organization to support occupants, business services, and assets during extreme events.

Risk Management

Identify how each scenario will address the regulatory and financial risks from performance standards, carbon charges, and supply disruptions.

Equity

Assess the equity impacts of each scenario, identifying opportunities to align investment decisions in ways that strengthen environmental justice.

Prioritize measures that use less energy or avoid emissions, then transition to low-carbon energy sources and low global warming potential (GWP) refrigerants, with the goal of reducing emissions without the use of carbon offsets. The scope of the plan will include both near-term actions and a transition to low- to no-carbon operations in the longer term. Near-term strategies such as electrification-readiness efforts will prepare organizations for deep emissions reduction projects across their portfolio as the electric grid decarbonizes over the next few decades. The planning horizon for the ERP is 10–20 years, depending on an organization’s goals. The framework lays the groundwork for applying technical strategies to reduce on-site emissions across a portfolio.

The processes for identifying and prioritizing energy performance improvement opportunities and GHG emissions reductions are very similar, and the prioritized energy performance opportunities will often result in emissions reductions. However, evaluation criteria must be clearly defined to address situations when an energy performance improvement opportunity may increase emissions, or when an emissions reduction opportunity may increase energy consumption.  The scenario development process described in Milestone 4 of the ERP Industrial Framework will be helpful in resolving such issues.   

The guidance for Task 10 is found within the following sections of the ERP Industrial Framework:

Milestone 2:

Select systems for further analysis – Decide which systems and facilities in the portfolio to prioritize. Generally, this means prioritizing SGEs – though organizations may prioritize based on cost, location, ease of technology piloting, scalability, or other characteristics. These priorities may depend on the organization (e.g., appetite for risk), the current policy environment (e.g., state, local, or utility policies, programs, and incentives that encourage organizations to prioritize emissions reductions in certain regions), or market conditions (e.g., relative fuel prices).

Milestone 3:

Facility-level GHG Emissions Reduction Assessments – Conducting facility-level assessments allows organizations to gain insight into individual facilities’ GHG emissions and identify, quantify, and prioritize emission reduction measures (ERMs). Such an assessment should go beyond a traditional energy audit by identifying many types of ERMs, not just energy efficiency opportunities. Furthermore, potential ERMs should primarily be assessed on emission reduction potential, not energy or cost savings.

Identify ERMs - Examine the facility’s energy use, production needs, operational characteristics, and other factors to identify ERMs. Depending on the facility and the processes involved, ERMs may include adopting energy efficiency, electrification, renewable fuels and energy sources, and carbon capture strategies.

Evaluate and Prioritize Options - Evaluate the potential impact and feasibility of the identified ERMs by analyzing the costs, benefits, and risks associated with each. Co-benefits should also be assessed and quantified whenever possible. Often, ERMs can yield additional improvements to safety, productivity, product quality, waste reduction, and more. Simple cost analysis may dissuade organizations from implementing ERMs that in reality show strong returns when assessed using comprehensive financial tools and analysis. While prioritizing the ERMs, take into consideration other important parameters such as the regulatory requirements for GHG emissions in the region and scalability/replicability. It is important to recall that the emission reduction potential of an individual ERM is likely to be affected by which other ERMs are implemented concurrently and how the organization procures energy over the course of an ERM’s duration (e.g., expected grid emissions factor over the lifetime of electrical equipment).

Facility-level ERMs can be classified into four technology pillars, as outlined in DOE’s Industrial Decarbonization Roadmap. The four pillars are:

  • Energy Efficiency
  • Electrification
  • Low Carbon Fuels, Feedstocks, and Energy Sources (LCFFES)
  • Carbon Capture, Utilization, and Storage

Portfolio-level GHG Emissions Reduction Assessment – Conduct a portfolio-level GHG emissions reduction assessment to identify, quantify, and prioritize ERMs that are implemented, led, and/or approved at the portfolio level, such as strategic energy management, clean energy procurement, demand management/load flexibility, circular economy strategies, or strategic business changes. This can also help companies understand the risks and opportunities associated with transitioning to a low-carbon economy. For a complete list of portfolio-wide ERM examples, you can refer to the ERP Framework document.

Milestone 4:

Combining inputs to develop multiple scenarios – There are different technical approaches to scaling the results from facility-level assessments to the broader portfolio. The scaling should identify which measures are related to specific categories and apply emissions projects appropriately. This process may include scaling using:

  • Energy system type (steam, process heating, etc.)
  • Energy use intensity
  • Equipment capacity
  • Facility location
  • Available space

Context will dictate which method is most relevant – e.g., organizations may initially scale electrification projects in regions where the grid’s emissions factor is the lowest, or they may prioritize fuel-switching in systems that currently use higher carbon intensity fuels, such as coal.

  • The phasing (or timing) of different ERMs will depend on factors such as:
  • Technical feasibility
  • Cost-effectiveness
  • Availability of resources
  • Regulatory environment (e.g., fuel switching and safety regulations)
  • Market conditions
  • Grid electricity decarbonization projections
  • Other sustainability goals

Milestone 5:

Assess scenarios and select pathway – After developing multiple emissions reduction scenarios (Milestone 4), assess which one best meets organizational needs using the evaluation criteria defined in Milestone 1, selecting it as the emissions reduction pathway. This will be a pathway that not only satisfies expected emissions reductions, but also optimizes additional criteria as much as possible based on organizational priorities.


Task 10 Decarbonization Guidance Version: v0.9
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The creative commons license is applicable only to the technical content found in the "Getting it Done", "Task Overview", "Full Description", and "Decarbonization" tabs. The creative commons license does not extend to the 50001 Ready Navigator software or other resources.

The results of the evaluations required in 42 U.S. Code § 8253(f)(3)(A) can be used to identify improvement opportunities for this task.

Criteria for contracting energy efficiency improvement projects effectively as required in 42 U.S. Code § 8262k may be used to support completion of this task.

Identification of performance improvement opportunities supports 42 U.S. Code § 8258b

FEMP Water Manual section 3.2 (Assess Water Efficiency Solutions) describes a few approaches for water efficiency project identification and improvement. Outcomes from Task 8: Energy Data Collection and Analysis of the Navigator are important in completing this task.

After completing baselining and conducting a water balance analysis, the next step is to identify ways to increase water use efficiency. Start by assessing the large water consumers identified in Task 9: Significant Energy Uses (SEUs). Projects should be prioritized based on their targeted end uses. Be inclusive when assessing opportunities and look for solutions that approach water management from different angles. It is important to assess O&M changes, retrofits, and replacements when evaluating water management solutions. Table 3 of FEMP’s Water Manual provides examples of water management solutions.

A major hurdle in the planning process is finding funding for projects. After you identify the water efficiency opportunities, perform an economic analysis to determine if the projects are life-cycle cost-effective. In this analysis, use the marginal water and sewer rates. Be sure to also include other related costs, such as energy and operations and maintenance changes that resulted from the measure. For example, faucet and showerhead retrofits save energy by reducing hot water use. This step also can help you to identify potential funding sources.

Use the DOE Building Life Cycle Cost Programs software to determine the economics of energy and water projects. Also, determine the annual escalation rate of the marginal cost of water to escalate water costs in the future.

The EPA’s WaterSense at Work step 4 (Creating an action plan) presents more information for prioritizing projects once saving opportunities have been identified. The EPA recommends that opportunities be prioritized using criteria such as urgency, cost-effectiveness, amount of potential water savings, visibility, and environmental impact. The water management team should address the simplest and most urgent tasks first. The remaining projects should be prioritized based on facility goals. All projects and practices selected should be considered in the context of achieving established water management goals, as well as overall cost-effectiveness.

Tools and Resources:

A key part of this task is to use as many sources as you can to brainstorm ways to reduce energy on both your selected SEUs and other systems with good savings potential.  Sources may include employees, utility account representatives, equipment vendors, energy assessments, resources from the Department of Energy, and others.

You should establish and execute a process to score, rank, and prioritize your energy projects based on a logical process, energy data, and other site-specific factors.

Although not required, organizations with an ISO 14001:2015 environmental management system may have processes in place to capture and prioritize environmental performance improvement opportunities (i.e., potential environmental projects) as inputs to the setting of environmental objectives and the planning of actions to achieve them. Some of those opportunities could be energy related. Any processes in place to identify and prioritize those opportunities could be useful for energy opportunities as well under ISO 50001:2018.

Step 2.5 and Step 3.2 of the ENERGY STAR® Guidelines for Energy Management provide guidance on identifying energy improvement opportunities such as conducting energy audits. The ENERGY STAR Energy Treasure Hunt Guide is another helpful ENERGY STAR resource that your organization may already be using to help identify low-cost/no-cost energy saving opportunities. The guidance contained in this task contains additional details, tools, and worksheets that can be helpful for identifying additional opportunities and prioritizing all opportunities

Step 3.2 of the ENERGY STAR Guidelines for Energy Management provides some tips on estimating potential for improvement, which include reviewing opportunities to reduce energy consumption.


Task 10 Guidance Version: v18.10.01.02
Creative Commons License
The creative commons license is applicable only to the technical content found in the "Getting it Done", "Task Overview", "Full Description", and "Decarbonization" tabs. The creative commons license does not extend to the 50001 Ready Navigator software or other resources.

Use this Notes section to save information for communication with other members of your project team, they will be able to see these Notes whey they are logged in to the 50001 Ready Navigator. Notes examples include dates of meeting with relevant personnel for completion of a portion of the task, decisions that have been made about task implementation, or perhaps a link to a file in your organization's shared drive that contains a completed worksheet or template. Please note, do not enter any information in here that you would not want shared with any members of the project team or the site's administrative staff.

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