Energy Management Principles: Applications, Benefits, Savings, Second Edition is a comprehensive guide to the fundamental principles and systematic processes of maintaining and improving energy efficiency and reducing waste. Fully revised and updated with analysis of world energy utilization, incentives and utility rates, and new content highlighting how energy efficiency can be achieved through 1 of 16 outlined principles and programs, the book presents cost effective analysis, case studies, global examples, and guidance on building and site auditing. This fully revised edition provides a theoretical basis for conservation, as well as the avenues for its application, and by doing so, outlines the potential for cost reductions through an analysis of inefficiencies. - Provides extensive coverage of all major fundamental energy management principles - Applies general principles to all major components of energy use, such as HVAC, electrical end use and lighting, and transportation - Describes how to initiate an energy management program for a building, a process, a farm or an industrial facility
Autorentext
Craig Smith retired as President and Chairman, DMJM H+N, a subsidiary of AECOM Technology Corporation, an international engineering and construction management firm. He began as an assistant professor of engineering at UCLA, where he was also the assistant director of the nuclear energy laboratory. After UCLA, he cofounded ANCO Engineers, Inc., an engineering consulting firm in Los Angeles, later joining AECOM as vice president of Daniel Mann, Johnson, and Mendenhall (DMJM). He subsequently became senior vice president, executive vice president, and COO. In 1999, he became president of Holmes and Narver, Inc. He has been broadly involved in the field of energy and power, responsible for design and construction management, tests, and research on most types of electrical generating facilities.
Inhalt
1. Introduction
2. Catalysts for Energy Management
3. General Principles of Energy Management
4. Planning Energy Management Programs
5. Understanding Utility Rates and Programs
6. Building and Site Energy Audits
7. Energy Analysis
8. Management of Heating and Cooling
9. Lighting Management
10. Electric Transportation
11. Management of Process Energy
12. Integrated Building Systems
13. Cost Effectiveness Analysis
14. Implementation and Continuous Assessment
List of Tables and Illustrations
Appendices
A. Abbreviations, Symbols, and Units
B. Units and Conversion Factors
C. Energy Management Data
Endnotes
Annotated Bibliography
Permissions and Credits
Acknowledgments