Can Energy Monitoring Save Las Vegas $150,000?

July 8, 2010

Las Vegas’ Tom Perrigo wants energy to pay for itself.

The city’s sustainability officer plans to install 1 MW of solar panels on 17 municipal parking garages this year and invest $3.5 million in LED, or induction, lighting to replace 20 percent of Sin City’s more profligate street lamps.

He also expects to allocate up to $4 million to retrofit 17 of the city’s 100 buildings. The money he saves on energy will be plowed back into new energy-efficiency programs. But knowing exactly how much is no easy calculation.

City expects one-year ROI on its choice of Hara’s energy tracking software

That’s where a separate investment will come in: licensing the four modules of Hara’s Environmental and Energy Management software. The software will track the city’s $15 million of annual electricity and natural gas use, and establish an accurate baseline against which to measure savings. The more the city saves, the more it can spend on future projects.

But the software will go another step toward Las Vegas’ energy-reduction targets. It will save money through energy monitoring and management. This Perrigo estimates will be 1 percent of the city’s annual bill, or $150,000, giving the software an ROI of one year.

“It’s a major change in the way we do business,” says Mayor Oscar Goodman. “It makes us smart.”

On Thursday, Las Vegas became Hara’s 35 customer, expanding a roster that includes corporations such as Apple, Coca Cola and Hasbro, which it added last month. The Redwood City start-up is on the front lines of the rapidly emerging environmental-management market. Its software lets managers track resources going in and out of an organization – inputs such as energy and water and outputs such as carbon and waste – and is attracting growing corporate and municipal interest.

Among its earliest customers is Palo Alto, which projects savings of more than $2 million on electricity, water and gas bills over three years. The savings will come primarily from reduced use.

According to Hara CEO Amit Chatterjee, the company’s biggest competitor is the spreadsheet Excel (though vendors such as SAP, CA and ENXSuite play in the space). About 80 percent of customers record environmental data in Excel before buying Hara, he says.

This includes Las Vegas. The city presently enters data from energy bills and nearly 4,000 meters manually into a spreadsheet. The process is time consuming and misses anomalies that come up due to equipment failure or billing errors. Responding to the anomalies will produce the $150,000 of savings.

Las Vegas says it will ultimately move to more sophisticated energy monitoring systems that include sensors and building-management software to examine data in real time. But the systems are expensive and don’t easily fit into older buildings. When buildings are retrofitted, they can be added.

Until then, Hara is a first step – and an important one.


CES 2010: A Smaller Show

January 5, 2010

Welcome sign at the Las Vegas airport!

Here we meet again, CES, the world’s largest show in consumer electronics land.

I just arrived in sunny Las Vegas before a stop in freezing Salt Lake City. Mark will get there later.

Surprisingly, traffic is quite fluid on Las Vegas boulevard, and there seems to be no waiting at the taxis line!

Good news, as I’ll be just in time to hear the analysts of the Consumer Electronics Association (CEA) – the organiser of the CES show – on their view of the global consumer electronics industry for 2010 and beyond.

All the events today are held at the Venetian hotel, as well as most press conferences tomorrow. We won’t head to the show at the convention centre until Thursday, Jan 7th, when it actually opens.

However, here are some early statistiques on the show shared by the organisers:

  1. CEA expects 2,500+ exhibitors this year, versus over 2,700 in 2009;
  2. And approximately 110,000 visitors, down a bit from the 113,000 a year ago;
  3. The show is also slightly smaller with 1.4 million square feet, versus 1.7 last year;
  4. But there’s seem to be as many press and analysts, about 5,000!

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