Prices must be provided for all fuels being used in the buildings being modeled. In addition, prices may also be provided for fuels not currently being used for FEDS to consider those fuels in its economic calculations (e.g., to consider fuel-switching opportunities).
TIP—Watch units required for fuel price parameters! Electric energy prices are requested in ¢/kWh, while demand charges are in $/kW.
No. FEDS infers parameters based on the most likely current condition of a building and its equipment. Inferences for an 1820 vintage building will reflect the typical improvements and upgrades that have occurred over time.
Weekday, Saturday, and Sunday hot water consumption values are determined using typical usage rates for a given use-area type, along with the number of occupants and occupancy schedule for each day type. Values are also adjusted according to such parameters as the presence or absence of showers and high efficiency fixtures.
FEDS assumes circulating (or loop) hot water systems serve entire buildings. Specifying a loop system for use-area 1 automatically identifies that it also serves use-area 2. Loop systems that only serve use-area 2 cannot be modeled, and the loop selection box is unnecessary and is disabled.
Generally, it is best to specify the original purpose of the building as the building type, and then modify the use-area type to reflect its current use. Select building type = "Education", use-area type = "Office." The building's construction characteristics are inferred based on building type, while usage parameters (including occupancy, lighting and equipment use, and hot water demand) are based on the use-area type.
If the building is newer than the rated life of the equipment in question, then the remaining life is equal to the difference of rated life and building age. If the building is older than the equipment's rated life, FEDS assumes that on average, equipment will be halfway through their life (but users can override this assumption and specify actual equipment vintage). Rated lives vary by equipment technology. Some examples of rated lives used in FEDS are:
envelope components (windows, insulation, etc.) – 40 years
lights – typically 25 years (Although the cost of replacing lamps and ballasts is figured into the analysis based on specific replacement intervals and hours of operation)
boilers – 40 years
furnaces – 20 years
chillers – 20 years
package AC units – 15 years
heat pumps – Air Source/15 years, Ground-Coupled/20 years
motors – 15 years
hot water heaters – electric, 12 years; gas, 10 years; distributed heat pump, 12 years; central heat pump, 15 years
Storage capacity for hot water is calculated using the building type and building's design occupancy. For distributed tank systems, values are rounded up to the next increment of typical tank capacity.
There is effectively no limit to the number of building sets allowed in a single case if there is enough hard drive space. Currently, each building set occupies approximately 4.3 megabytes of space across all file types. Given adequate storage space, FEDS can be—and has been—used to model an entire community, city, or utility service area.
There is no real limit to the number of buildings that can be modeled in a building set. However, building sets are designed to model buildings that share similar characteristics. The more similar buildings are within a given building set, the more accurate the results will be.
No. If a building (or use-area) has any hot water available users should specify 100% of it is served by hot water. As long as there is hot water available in a space, occupants will utilize it even if it is not immediately accessible. The purpose of having the portion served input is to allow the FEDS user to specify entire buildings (or use-areas) within a building set that do not have any hot water. For example, for a building set consisting of 10 buildings in which two of the buildings have no hot water service, they would enter that two buildings (or 20%) for the portion of buildings in this set that have no water heating.
FEDS contains a built-in database of building survey data and is able to infer a number of building parameters based on the small set of required inputs provided by the user. For example, FEDS uses information such as building type, location, floor area, and vintage to determine the most likely construction type and geometry. It uses similar information along with heating fuel type and cooling equipment, to determine the most likely heating technology and ventilation system parameters for a building. All inferences enable a user to model buildings without having intimate knowledge of the detailed engineering parameters. The resulting building prototype parameter values are statistically the most likely values based on the limited set of information provided. Of course, all inferred data may be easily overwritten by simply entering (locking) a value in the user interface screens.
FEDS draws upon a number of sources to determine inferable parameter values. Major sources include national building energy consumption surveys such as the Commercial Buildings Energy Consumption, Residential Energy Consumption Survey, large end-use studies such as the End-Use Load and Consumer Assessment Program, ASHRAE handbooks, building and equipment codes and standards, and manufacturers' data and extensive building audit and evaluation experience.
Use the building type or use-area designation that best fits regardless of which list it is on. The building set classes were grouped this way to aid in the selection of common types, but either list may be selected.
A locked value, in terms of FEDS inputs, is one that the user has entered for an inferable parameter. This indicates to the model that this is a user-entered value and should not be updated (inferred). Clicking on the lock symbol can also lock a currently inferred value. When a value is locked, the lock icon will appear as a latched or closed lock. To unlock a value, simply click the icon again, changing it to an open or unlatched lock. This value will now be inferred the next time inferences are run.
Typically, the "Other" fuel type represents liquid propane gas (LPG) or propane fuel. However, if you use another fuel type that is not listed (e.g., wood chips), you may use "Other" to represent this fuel type.
A minimum or contract demand is included in some commercial and industrial electricity tariffs. It specifies the minimum billing demand that will be charged each month. This is important to understand because implementing energy efficiency projects that reduce the site’s monthly peak demand below the contract demand will have limited return, as no additional savings in demand charges will accrue once the actual monthly demand falls below the minimum contract value. If that is possible for your site, it is best to review this with your utility and negotiate a lower contract demand.
A demand ratchet is a billing method commonly imposed by electric utilities on large commercial or industrial customers. It specifies that the billed demand level in kW be the larger of the actual peak demand for the billing period, or a percentage of the highest peak reached during the previous X months. A typical demand ratchet uses 80% of the peak demand occurring during the previous 11 months as the comparison point. Under this scenario, if your facility experiences a peak demand of 1,000 kW for one hour (or 15 minute interval) you will be billed for a minimum of 800 kW during the next 11 months, even if your actual demand is much lower. Demand ratchets are generally used by utilities to reduce the risks of serving certain types of customers who have potentially large swings in demand during the year—making them pay for the assurance of having the high capacity available when needed.
A marginal price is the price paid for the last increment of energy purchased. This should, therefore, exclude all fixed charges (e.g., the monthly customer or meter charge) and focus only on the costs that vary based on the amount of energy used. Some rate structures are more complex and require some analysis. For example, in a block electric rate structure where users pay a certain amount depending on how much electricity used during the month, the value of electricity would be the price corresponding to the amount the building generally consumes in a month (rather than the average cost over all kWh's used). The marginal rate is the value of a unit of energy saved (i.e., the value of a kWh saved by an efficiency measure).
Providing detailed marginal prices for electricity (including any time-of-day or seasonal variations, and the impact of demand charges and ratchets) is important as it can have a huge impact on the types and cost effectiveness of recommended efficiency measures, as compared with applying basic melded average rates.
Distillate oil is light fuel oil that has been further refined than heavier oils. Examples include #2 fuel oil and diesel fuel. Residual oil, as its name suggests, is the oil residue that remains after distilling out the lighter grade components. It is generally designated as #4, #5, or #6 fuel oil, is much more viscous than ordinary oils, and must be heated to allow it to flow and be burned.
For distributed tank systems, FEDS assumes commercial tanks are 80 gallons, while residential units are 50 gallons.
FEDS assumes loop (circulating) systems serve an entire building and, therefore, the number of tanks is inferred to be one for each building, regardless of the number of use areas present.
Most fuels are valued in FEDS as delivered to the building or end-use. However, the value for district fuels at the building or end-use level are determined somewhat differently. For self-generated fuel types (e.g., central steam, hot water, or chilled water) FEDS calculates the value of the fuel from the inputs in the central plants and thermal loops module. For example, the average value of self-generated steam is calculated based on the energy price of the fuel consumed by the boiler at the central plant along with its conversion efficiency, value of auxiliary energy and chemicals and labor to operate the plant, plus thermal and leakage losses in the thermal loops that distribute the steam to the building. If the central steam plant has multiple distribution loops, the losses may be different and therefore each steam loop can have its own average value for the steam it delivers. For purchased central fuel types (purchased steam, hot water, or chilled water) the value of the fuel delivered to the installation boundary is entered on the "Non-Electric Energy Prices" screen, and then FEDS applies information on the efficiency of each distribution loop to determine the average value of the steam at the building level as delivered by each loop. Marginal values do not consider fixed O&M costs (i.e., those that do not vary with the quantity of central fuel produced/delivered) or distribution losses (which are fixed and do not vary with the amount of energy delivered). Marginal values are used to determine the value of each increment of energy consumed or saved.
No. Given the importance of energy prices on the analysis, as well as the significant variation in rates available within a given region, there are no default or inferred electric or non-electric fuel price data. Users should enter the value of all fuels available.