Development of Municipal Energy Management as Trigger of Future Energy Savings
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Definition of EM in Municipalities and Its Presentation
1.2. The Base for Municipal EM Implementation
1.3. The Problems of SECAP Implementation in Small- and Middle-Sized Municipalities
1.4. The SECAP Coherence with National Energy Planning
2. Goals of this Study
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Methods Used in the Reserch Conducted in 2023
- (a)
- The number of and variability in energy delivery points (DPs) affect two basic types of costs of EM. The first type of these costs is the salary of an energy manager. The high DP number or the variability in different types (electric, gas, heat, and water) of DPs imply the high workload for EM and consequently a higher salary cost.
- (b)
- The second type of cost is the expenditure for specialized software. The increasing DP number cannot be administrated by the common office computer programs and the specialized software should be implemented here. The SW is used for energy consumption recording, invoices storage, revisions report archiving, various alerts, and other EM-related services. The SW outputs allow for comparing the energy performance of different buildings, making the graphs of consumption, etc. If the municipality buys the SW, it generates purchasing the cost and the expenditures for annual licenses and possibly the payments for software modification according to user (municipality) requirements.
- (c)
- The modus of EM personnel covering implies the varying levels of energy manager salary costs. If the work position of an energy manager is established as a new one not derived from another work position, then salary costs will be incurred. The alternative approach is that duties for EM are assigned to an existing magistrate employee as an additional task to their current job duties. In this case, the duties for EM are very often not mentioned in the work contract, or the formulation is quite vague. The workload measured in work hours per week or an extra salary for these duties is missing very often as well. This approach is typical for municipalities where EM is not yet perceived as a relevant issue. There are other variables influencing the salary cost. The level of the energy managers’ education affects the costs as the salaries of municipal employees are derived from the government ordinance on salaries. Higher education results in a higher salary. The different specialization by the same level of education means different salaries, e.g., a master of electrical engineering is paid better than a master of mechanical engineering. The level and specialization of energy managers were investigated.
- (d)
- A formalized description of EM, in particular, the responsibilities, authorities, and job descriptions for the employees who are significantly involved in EM. A formalized description of responsibilities indicates the maturity of EM. EM needs a correct formal description to work properly. The proper description is the result of the continuous development of EM, and during this development, the maturity of EM increases. In case EM is not described and is only based on daily routine, it collapses the moment the key persons leave. The period of EM re-establishing after the key persons left the scene is often connected with harms and extra payments because of the missing know-how.
- (e)
- Purchasing energy on the commodity exchange. This type of energy purchasing is considered the most efficient way to secure electricity and gas suppliers. If energy manager is able to purchase on the commodity exchange, then this provides a benefit to the city in the form of cheaper electricity or gas prices. The prerequisite for such purchasing is the list of delivery points (gas or electricity), including the records about the previous energy consumption, circuit breaker value (for electric DPs), type of measurement, electric tariff, etc. The existence of such a list is evidence of the certain maturity of EM. Energy exchange purchasing leads to lower unit prices and therefore is popular among cities. In addition, this type of purchasing is significantly easier than the conventional approach according to the Public Tender Act.
- (f)
- EM based on the ISO 50001 standard or EM excluding the ISO. According to the Czech Act no. 406/2000 Coll. on Energy Management, the municipality must implement the EM based on ISO 50001 or conduct the energy audits including the whole municipal equipment with significant energy consumption. If the municipality prefers to establish EM according to ISO 50001, it may generate costs for the consulting company and surely generate costs for EM certification by an independent certification body. If the city decides to conduct an energy audit, then there will be costs for an energy expert, because the energy audits must be carried out by an official person only.
- (g)
- The period of energy consumption recording. Energy consumption records are an essential part of EM. The records are the basis for decision making on measures to reduce energy consumption. After a measure is applied, the consumption recording is necessary to prove the measure meets the expectations. The long period of recording indicates the higher maturity of EM. In the case of many DPs, the consumption recording is not a trivial task and needs several years to be established properly. The maintenance of the database of records is not trivial either.
3.2. Implementation Phase of this Research 2023
3.3. Wording and Number of Questions
4. Results
4.1. Research Conducted between 2009 and 2018
- The overwhelming majority of respondents (65%) answered that they do not support RES. What is the main cause of rejecting RES, which enjoys generous political support and ever-decreasing investment costs nowadays?
- A total of 15% of the municipalities responded that they have never applied for a subsidy to obtain funds for projects improving energy efficiency. Why has such a large proportion of municipalities not submitted any application despite the long-term availability and variety of subsidy schemes? Is it the excessive administrative burden or the reluctance of responsible workers in particular municipalities?
- The number of municipalities motivating the users of their buildings to perform energy-saving behavior has shrunk (from 72% to 61%). Undoubtedly, motivation is an essential factor in this field and its appropriate form can lead to significant improvement.
- The decline in the number of municipalities (from 96% to 68%) that collect data on street lighting energy consumption is also unusual and deserves further examination and validation.
4.2. Research Conducted in 2023
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Questionnaire Used in 2023
- How many delivery points for electric, gas and heat are placed in your city?
- Is there any binding document describing how many employees of the city, contributory organizations and possibly other organizations managed by the city are dedicated to EM and what specifically they are supposed to do for EM?
- If you use any software for EM purposes, please specify: since when is it used, from which supplier and for what purposes?
- How does the city provide its energy supply? If by purchasing from a energy exchange—since when, what energy, on what exchange?
- Since which year have regular records of energy consumption been kept for most city buildings?
- Is your EM system ISO 50001 certified or do you conduct energy audits? If you have ISO 50001 in place, in which year was the certification done? Alternatively, when do you plan to certify?
Appendix B
- Does your city have a staff member who is responsible for energy saving? Or does the municipality work with an energy expert?
- Does the municipality’s staff participate in energy saving training?
- Does your city promote energy savings? If so, in what ways?
- Does your city support renewable energy? If yes, in what way?
- Does your city collect data on energy consumption and generation from local renewable energy sources?
- Have you applied or are you applying for grants to fund energy efficiency projects? If yes, in what programs?
- Would you be interested in comparing your city’s baseline energy data with other cities?
- How long have you had an energy management system in place through the implementation of energy management?
- Is implementing and maintaining an energy management system according to EN ISO 50001 complex and difficult to sustain?
- Has the implementation of energy management resulted in energy savings?
- Is your city trying to reduce energy expenditure within the city’s operational expenditure?
- Does your city motivate entities managing city facilities to save energy?
- Does your city have a database of city-owned buildings with data on their energy performance?
- Does your city keep records of the energy class of its buildings according to the energy performance certificate?
- Does your city collect data on energy consumption in public lighting on an annual basis?
- Are you interested in implementing energy management according to EN ISO 50001?
- Is the complexity of implementing and maintaining energy management according to EN ISO 50001 a barrier to implementing energy management?
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Question | 2009 53 Replies [%] | 2018 50 Replies [%] | 2018 vs. 2009 | |
---|---|---|---|---|
a | Does the energy issue belong to the priorities of your municipality? | 73 YES | 87 YES | +19% |
b | Does your municipality employ somebody to deal with energy savings? Does your municipality collaborate with an energy specialist? | 40 YES | 63 YES | +57% |
c | Do employees in your municipality take part in educational activities in the field of energy savings? | 42 YES | 63 YES | +50% |
d | Does your municipality support renewable energy sources? If so, in what way? | 25 YES | 35 YES | +40% |
e | Does your municipality collect data on energy consumption and on energy production from local renewable energy sources? | 17 YES | 66 YES | +288% |
f | Does your municipality motivate entities in city-owned buildings to energy savings? | 72 YES | 61 YES | −16% |
g | Does your municipality have a database of city-owned buildings together with data on their energy performance? | 68 YES | 85 YES | +25% |
h | Does your municipality collect data on energy consumption related to street lighting annually? | 96 YES | 68 YES | −29% |
i | Have you applied or are you in the process of applying for a subsidy for funding projects focusing on energy savings? If so, which programs did you choose? | 70 YES | 85 YES | +21% |
j | Would you be interested in a comparison of your essential energy data with other municipalities? | 77 YES | 85 YES | +10% |
Energy Manager | Frequency | Portion |
---|---|---|
is employed | 41 | 66.1% |
not employed | 15 | 24.2% |
just in process | 2 | 3.2% |
other reply | 4 | 6.5% |
Degree | Specialization | Frequency | Portion |
---|---|---|---|
master’s degree | electrical engineering | 6 | 9.7% |
civil engineering | 1 | 1.6% | |
economy engineering | 10 | 16.1% | |
other engineering | 11 | 17.7% | |
bachelor’s degree | specialization not divided | 4 | 6.5% |
high school | specialization not divided | 11 | 17.7% |
no EM | - | 19 | 30.6% |
Type of Used SW | Frequency | Portion |
---|---|---|
no SW | 25 | 40.3% |
energy broker | 16 | 25.8% |
e-manager | 7 | 11.3% |
own developed software | 3 | 4.8% |
MS Excel sheets | 2 | 3.2% |
SW from other 7 diff. producents | 9 | 14.5% |
EM Basic Document | Frequency | Portion |
---|---|---|
no document exists | 43 | 69.4% |
document according to ISO | 6 | 9.7% |
internal magistrate document | 9 | 14.5% |
other type of document | 4 | 6.5% |
Exchange Purchasing | Frequency | Portion |
---|---|---|
ČMKB Kladno | 24 | 38.7% |
PXE Praha | 21 | 33.9% |
unknown exchange | 5 | 8.1% |
both possibilities | 2 | 3.2% |
without exchange | 10 | 16.1% |
Certified EM or Energy Audits | Frequency | Portion |
---|---|---|
both possibilities negative | 20 | 32.3% |
energy audits | 19 | 30.6% |
ISO certification is not planned | 8 | 12.9% |
EM certified according to ISO | 6 | 9.7% |
EM certification just in process | 6 | 9.7% |
considering both possibilities | 3 | 4.8% |
Consumption Is Recorded Since | Frequency | Portion |
---|---|---|
2000 | 2 | 3.2% |
2010 | 4 | 6.5% |
2015 | 10 | 16.1% |
2017 | 9 | 14.5% |
2018 | 9 | 14.5% |
2019 | 5 | 8.1% |
2020 | 3 | 4.8% |
2021 | 1 | 1.6% |
2022 | 6 | 9.7% |
2023 | 5 | 8.1% |
no records | 8 | 12.9% |
Year | Subsidy Application for Establishing EM |
---|---|
2017 | 18 |
2018 | 10 |
2019 | 12 |
2020 | 11 |
2021 | 13 |
2022 | 46 |
2023 | 40 |
Year | Number of Members |
---|---|
2019 | 4 |
2020 | 15 |
2021 | 20 |
2022 | 24 |
2023 | 27 |
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Bačovský, M.; Karásek, J.; Kaločai, L. Development of Municipal Energy Management as Trigger of Future Energy Savings. Buildings 2024, 14, 899. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14040899
Bačovský M, Karásek J, Kaločai L. Development of Municipal Energy Management as Trigger of Future Energy Savings. Buildings. 2024; 14(4):899. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14040899
Chicago/Turabian StyleBačovský, Michal, Jiří Karásek, and Ladislav Kaločai. 2024. "Development of Municipal Energy Management as Trigger of Future Energy Savings" Buildings 14, no. 4: 899. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14040899
APA StyleBačovský, M., Karásek, J., & Kaločai, L. (2024). Development of Municipal Energy Management as Trigger of Future Energy Savings. Buildings, 14(4), 899. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14040899