eitf and tooele open house objectives
TRANSCRIPT
Assistant Secretary of the Army (Installations, Energy & Environment)
EITF and Tooele Open House Objectives Doug Waters, Execution Project Director
10 October 2012
Energy Initiatives Task Force 1
Assistant Secretary of the Army (Installations, Energy & Environment)
• Objectives of Open House
• Army’s Energy Initiatives Task Force (EITF)
Overview
Energy Initiatives Task Force UNCLASSIFIED 2
Assistant Secretary of the Army (Installations, Energy & Environment)
• Foster an open dialogue with the public and private
renewable energy industry
• Provide a forum for industry to discuss their ability and
interest to develop energy projects
• Provide opportunity for renewable energy industry and public
entities to:
– Examine real property assets and mission activities at TEAD
– Learn of the potential for developing alternative/renewable
energy at TEAD
– Become familiar with the utilization of TEAD’s work-share
program
• Encourage industry to identify potential market use(s) of the
land
Open House Objectives
Energy Initiatives Task Force UNCLASSIFIED 3
Assistant Secretary of the Army (Installations, Energy & Environment)
Why is the EITF at Tooele?
Energy Initiatives Task Force UNCLASSIFIED 4
Assistant Secretary of the Army (Installations, Energy & Environment)
Energy Initiatives Task Force Unclassified 5
The Need for Energy Security is Increasing
Assistant Secretary of the Army (Installations, Energy & Environment)
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Impacts to U.S. Army’s Energy
Energy Initiatives Task Force UNCLASSIFIED
Assistant Secretary of the Army (Installations, Energy & Environment)
Energy Initiatives Task Force UNCLASSIFIED 7
Path to 25% Renewable Energy by 2025 - Notional
Traditional Energy
Renewable Energy Requires leverage of private sector funding, EUL, PPA
Energy Efficiency Gains funded by appropriated
funding, ESPC, UESC
Major Issues
• Declining Budgets
• Specialized Expertise
• Enterprise Strategy
Army Progress .5% in 2011
Renewable Energy
NDAA 2010: 25% by 2025
EP Act 2005 7.5% by 2013
% R
enew
able
Energ
y of T
ota
l E
nerg
y
Army Energy Outlook
* 47,900 MWH of renewable generation in FY2011 from 168 different projects
Assistant Secretary of the Army (Installations, Energy & Environment)
Fort Drum, NY
(Solar Wall)
Army Renewable Energy NOT New
Hawthorne Army Depot, NV
(Geothermal Power)
Fort Jackson, SC
(Fuel Cells) Fort Bliss, TX
(Geothermal Well Tests)
Fort Knox, KY
(Ground Source Heat
Pumps, Shale Gas)
Fort Huachuca, AZ
(Rooftop PV)
Fort Irwin, CA
(Solar Power) Fort Bragg, NC
(LEED Platinum)
GOLD: Existing Project
BLUE: Planned Project
GREEN: Development or Testing Project
Tooele AD, UT
(Wind Power)
TOTAL PROJECTS = 168 47,900 MWh of renewable generation in FY2011 Source 2011 Army Energy Management Report
Fort Sill, OK
(Micro-grid Field Demo)
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Fort Carson, CO
(Solar PV Array)
Energy Initiatives Task Force UNCLASSIFIED
Assistant Secretary of the Army (Installations, Energy & Environment)
EITF serves as the central management office to
implement cost-effective, large-scale,
renewable energy projects on Army installations,
leveraging private sector financing.
Features:
Large-scale renewable energy projects
• Greater than 10MW
• Will coordinate with installations for 1-10MW
opportunities
• Will use land-use and third-party financing
authorities: EUL, easement, ESPC, PPA and
UESC
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EITF
Energy Initiatives Task Force UNCLASSIFIED
Energy Initiatives Task Force (EITF) established by the Secretary
of the Army on September 15, 2011.
Assistant Secretary of the Army (Installations, Energy & Environment)
Systematic Enterprise Approach
Where is best potential for Large Scale RE?
96 Sites, 179 Opportunities (180 Sites Total)
Where could RE be cheaper than grid
power?
90 sites for wind 39 sites for solar
10 sites for biomass
We have screened the entire Army enterprise to identify a strong bench of opportunities
Security Tier
Where is Energy Security critical?
Where are other factors to consider?
• Additional off-take • Existing utility relationships • Access to transmission • Well defined environmental
issues
Energy Initiatives Task Force Unclassified 10
Assistant Secretary of the Army (Installations, Energy & Environment)
Progress & Opportunity Assessments
Fort Bliss, TX
Fort Detrick, MD
Schofield Barracks, HI
Fort Drum, NY
Fort Irwin, CA
Tooele Army Depot, UT
Yuma Proving Grounds, AZ
Sierra Army Depot, CA
Fort Bragg, NC
Fort Leonard Wood
Fort Lewis, WA (JBLM)
Fort Riley, KS
Hawthorne Army Depot, NV
Iowa Army Ammo Plant, IA
Kahuku Training Area, HI
Letterkenny Army Depot, PA
Oregon Army National Guard, OR
Parks Reserve Forces Training Area, CA
Rock Island Arsenal, IL
West Point (U.S. Military Academy), NY
White Sands Missile Range, NM
WA
OR
NV
CA
HI
UT
AZ NM
CO KS
OK
TX
IA
IL
PA
NY
MD
NC
Assistant Secretary of the Army (Installations, Energy & Environment)
Building a Pipeline to 1 GW
38
80 80
100
100
100 100 100 100 100 100 100
28 28
13
20 20
16 16 20 20 18 19 19
19 20
-
200
400
600
800
1,000
1,200
1,400
1,600
-
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025
Small-Scale Projects Built Large-Scale Projects Built (EITF)
Cumulative Capacity (Large + Small) Cumulative Capacity (Large Only)
Annual Capacity
Installed (MW)
(stacked bars)
Cumulative Capacity
Installed (MW)
(lines)
EITF projects use third-party financing : PPA, EUL, and large UESC / ESPC
Small-scale projects, relying on multiple funding mechanisms
(ECIP, SRM, ESPC, etc.)
Energy Initiatives Task Force Unclassified 12
Data Sources: OACSIM RE Budget Projections for ECIP and SRM programs May 2012
OACSIM production estimates for ESPC projects at August 2011; EITF PET model runs May 2012
Assumptions: Renewable average capacity cost $3750/kW; average capacity factor 30%
1097 MW
1372 MW
Numbers are for Illustration Purposes Only
Assistant Secretary of the Army (Installations, Energy & Environment)
The EITF will leverage existing Army authorities to meet
sustainability and renewable energy goals:
• Utility Energy Services Contracts (10 USC 2913)
• Enhanced-use Leasing (10 USC 2667)
• Easement authority (40 USC 1314)
• Acquisition of Utility Services (10 USC 590, FAR Part 41)
• Power Purchase Agreements (10 USC 2922a)
• Energy Savings Performance Contracts (42 USC 8287 )
• Cooperative Agreements (31 USC 6305)
• Sale of electrical power to Utilities from on-site, private energy generation
facilities (10 USC 2916)
• Environment, Energy and Water Efficiency, Renewable Energy
Technologies, Occupational Safety, and Drug-Free Workplace
(FAR Part 23)
Energy Initiatives Task Force UNCLASSIFIED 13
Enabling Authorities
Assistant Secretary of the Army (Installations, Energy & Environment)
Follow the EITF
Energy Initiatives Task Force UNCLASSIFIED 14
www.armyeitf.com
Facebook @
US Army Energy Initiatives Task Force
Twitter @ ARMYEITF
LinkedIn Group @ www.LinkedIn.com
Assistant Secretary of the Army (Installations, Energy & Environment)
AMERICA’S ARMY: THE STRENGTH OF THE NATION
ARMY STRONG
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