Glenn Hegar
Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts
Glenn Hegar
Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts
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Glenn Hegar
Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts
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Agency Type: Providing

University of Texas at Austin

Electricity Image
Natural Gas Image
Water Image
Transportation Fuels Image
CONVENTIONAL FUELS Gasoline & Diesel
ALTERNATIVE FUELS Bio fuel, Natural Gas

PROGRESS REPORT

Overview

The campus uses innovation and technology to provide reliable and cost-effective utilities to support the tradition of teaching and research excellence at the University of Texas at Austin. The power complex provides 100 percent of campus electricity and heating. Our five chilling stations and 9.5 million gallons of chilled water in two thermal energy storage tanks satisfy the cooling requirements for 28 million square feet in more than 160 campus buildings, serving 74,000 faculty, students and staff. The complex provides the university with an independent utility system, with electrical ties to the city of Austin electrical grid as an emergency backup source of power. Utilities & Energy Management (UEM) recently achieved Performance Excellence in Electricity Renewal (PEER) Platinum certification for this district energy system.

For the fiscal year ending Aug. 31, 2022, we are pleased to report that our continued efforts to optimize energy production and usage and reduce waste resulted in a campus fuel consumption level equivalent to that of 1976, despite campus expansion of over 10 million gross square feet (GSF). Over the past 56 years, UT-Austin has experienced only five campus-wide electrical outages.

In 2022, we achieved a total site energy use intensity (EUI) of 176,085 kilo British Thermal Units (kbtu)/GSF. Since 1990, UT-Austin has reduced the EUI by 53 percent, while space grew 13.4 million GSF in the same period.

Water consumption has been reduced from 0.025 million gallons (Mgal)(/GSF in 2006 to 0.023 Mgal/GSF in 2022, for an 8 percent reduction.

Rather than reporting separate electrical and natural gas goals because of our approach to serve the campus with a combined heat and power and district energy system, we will report a total energy EUI as our basis of reporting energy efficiency.

Awards and Distinctions

  • Certificate of Recognition, Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts State Energy Conservation Office (2006)
  • Energy Star System of the Year Award, EPA and U.S. Department of Energy (2006)
  • Texas Environmental Excellence Award, Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (2008)
  • Award of Excellence for Outstanding Achievement in District Energy, International Energy Agency (2009)
  • Corporate Energy Management Award, Association of Energy Engineers (2010)
  • Pacesetter Plant Award by the Combined Cycle Journal (2012)
  • PEER Certification, Green Business Certification Inc. (2015)
  • System of the Year Award, International District Energy Association (2018)
  • PEER Re-Certification – Platinum, GBCI Inc. (2019)
  • Ovation Users Group Innovation Project of the Year Award (2020) for the implementation of the Supervisory Data Acquisition System upgrade of the campus micro-grid.

Improvements Contributing to Consumption Reduction

  • Significant improvements to the power plant, chilling stations, electrical distribution, and chilled water distribution system combined with demand-side improvements in buildings have allowed us to achieve and maintain utility consumption reductions. Please see the “Efficiency Efforts” page on our website at https://utilities.utexas.edu/ for more details.

GOALS

The most recent change in operational strategy is to predict future campus electrical loads based on weather forecasts and historical data and dispatch chilled water production and thermal energy storage systems to reduce peak electrical demand and improve power generation efficiency. The net result of these optimization efforts has been a 5 megawatt (MW) peak load reduction, saving 29.2 million kilowatt hours (kWh)/year and reducing carbon dioxide emissions by 72,000 tons/year. We anticipate some electrification of buildings and fleets, including the addition of electric vehicle charging stations at our buildings in the coming years. Therefore, we expect electricity consumption to potentially increase and do not have a goal for reduction.

Utility Conservation Goals
Utility Target Year Benchmark Year Percentage Goal
Water FY2030 FY2020 5% per square foot
Electricity
Transportation Fuels FY2030 FY2020 0.05
Natural Gas FY2030 FY2020 5% per square foot

STRATEGY FOR ACHIEVING GOALS

The Energy Management & Strategic Programs team works with key staff to optimize operations and employ energy and conservation measures on the UT Austin campus. The staff identifies buildings across campus that are not operating as efficiently as they could and implements measures including HVAC scheduling, supply temperature resets, static pressure resets, unoccupied setbacks, economizing and lighting retrofits. The team also works with Campus Planning and Construction and Project Management and Construction Services to ensure new buildings and renovations are designed and constructed to be as energy efficient as possible. The power plant is optimized via the Power Plant Megawatt Management System, which is a supervisory control system with logic that calculates setpoints for the combustion turbine generator and for steam turbine generators. The Chilling Stations and Thermal Energy Storage tanks utilize an optimization platform called Optimum Energy (OE) to control operations of each chilling station. OE trends the efficiency curves of each plant component at every possible operating condition and then adjusts the operating parameters of each component to provide the most efficient whole-system operation at a rate of once per second.

The campus is preparing for electrification via heat pump chillers, a master plan for electric vehicle infrastructure, hydrogen as a fuel in our gas turbines and boilers and solar infrastructure. In addition, a water management plan is being developed to optimize use of groundwater, fin water, reclaimed, recovered and rain water to avoid domestic water consumption.

IMPLEMENTATION SCHEDULE

The majority of UT-Austin’s utility conservation measures are in place and ongoing.

Existing Buildings

  • As UT-Austin renovates, remodels and upgrades campus facilities, it continues to complete lighting retrofits, transformer upgrades, installation of occupancy sensors on lighting in rooms where feasible and replacement of older HVAC system components with higher efficiency models (including, but not limited to, pump/fan motors, mixing boxes, air handler units and chillers).

New Buildings

  • UT-Austin has commissioned 18 new Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED)-certified buildings since 2007, with two additional buildings pending certification or in construction. The LEED program will continue.

AGENCY FINANCE STRATEGY

UT-Austin finances all plant improvements using the utility rate structure. The cost avoidance from prior utility system improvements has yielded a higher rate of return than the financial cost of the improvements. Cost savings realized by the improvements to our facility infrastructure provide the financial justification for continuation of this process in order to maximize the operating efficiency of the entire campus.

Funds received from the IRS 179D Act distributions from capital projects are used as seed money to implement demand-side projects. A redistribution of energy savings directly attributable to building energy savings will be requested to fund more savings. Deferred maintenance and recapitalization projects that will further enhance utility consumption reductions will be sought in partnership with the campus.

EMPLOYEE AWARENESS PLAN

Utilities and Energy Management is in the process of developing a web-accessed Energy Hub using Amazon Web Services. It will provide electrical, thermal energy and water consumption information as well as various key performance indicators to the UT community as well as the public. It will include greenhouse gas emissions data, EUIs for each building and district energy system operations data.

Install monitor power-management software. U.S. companies waste more than $1 billion annually on electricity for computer monitors that are not in use. Install power-management software for computer monitors, central processing units (CPUs) and hard drives to save on electricity costs.

(Source: Building Owners and Managers Association International)


The inclusion of an entity's information here confirms that the Comptroller received the submitted information, but does not verify the accuracy of the data. Specific questions or concerns regarding an entity's energy planning and usage should be directed to that entity.

If you have any other questions, please contact us or call 512-463-1931.