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Ouch! That about sums
up the impact of rising energy costs on building owners. If you’re
about to build or planning to, it pays—really, really pays—to
do due diligence on energy options in advance. Think strategically. Think
long term.
“Focusing only on ‘first cost’ is pretty short-sighted
these days,” says Dan Kerr, director of design-build services for
the McClure Company in Harrisburg. “We’re seeing more and
more customers willing to evaluate the time value of money when it comes
to electricity and energy systems for buildings.”
Everything is going up—oil, natural gas—in some cases by more
than 50 percent from just eight years ago. The rate caps on electricity
in Pennsylvania are soon to come off. The cost of electricity is expected
to rise 30 to 35 percent, maybe more.
We’d all like to think this is just a bump in the road, but don’t
count on it. Tom Bathgate, president of PWI Engineering in Philadelphia,
did his first energy analysis in 1972 and has since consulted in nearly
30 countries. He says flatly, “Costs of all energy sources are going
to continue to grow.”
If you don’t plan carefully and thoughtfully before you build, “you
could wind up living in a new ‘home’ you can’t afford,”
says Austin Williams, facilities manager for Bosch Security Systems Inc.’s
213,000-square-foot manufacturing campus in Lancaster, Pa.
All three—Kerr, Bathgate, and Williams—agree it’s critical
to focus on energy efficiency.
“Everything will become more volatile, so people should use less
energy,” Kerr advises.
Look at the construction cost of each system option you’re considering
and model the energy usage down to the square foot, he says. Come up with
a pro forma for cash flow taking energy, operating, maintenance, and replacement
costs into account. “It’s that sort of financial analysis
that most customers seem to be interested in right now,” he says.
Williams recommends investigating rate schedules with your electric utility.
“Consult with your service provider early on,” he says. “Obtain
the most efficient rate structure and build around that.” Choose
Energy Star-rated efficient equipment, he adds.
Even if you’re facing cost constraints, it’s still worth “putting
the building blocks in place for the future,” he notes. That might
mean putting in high-capacity cabling for down-the-road power distribution
needs or making allowance for control systems for future work configurations.
“Up-front planning is the key.”
Bathgate urges thinking in terms of fuel flexibility. “Whatever
system I choose, I want it to be multi-fueled,” he says. For example,
Kerr says, you might consider a heating system that can run on natural
gas, No. 2 heating oil, or a biofuel such as switch grass, corn stalks,
or wood chips.
Along with flexibility, both say, think renewable energy. This encompasses
photovoltaic panels, solar heating systems, and wind turbines along with
biofuel.
Biofuel is still expensive relative to results; you need grant money or
tax breaks to offset the costs. “The people putting it in now are
early adopters,” says Kerr. But he’s high on solar, which
he thinks is inevitable, and he’s also high on geothermal, especially
for large facilities. “Geothermal has gone from cutting edge to
mainstream,” he says.
Being resourceful about energy may mean generating some or all of your
own electricity. A large facility like a hospital may find it feasible
to operate a combined power plant and heating system, Kerr says. The heat
byproduct from generating power goes to heating the building and providing
hot water.
Green design features can help you save energy even if you don’t
intend to seek formal LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design)
certification.
Bathgate believes there is a custom solution to every energy need: “Study
what the resources for fuel are around you. Landfill? Can you help develop
that and recover methane? Compost from the mushroom industry, or manure
from chicken farms? Burn it. Is there a reliable stream that can generate
electricity? Every site in the country has wind data. It’s worth
taking a look.” 
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