| Financial
Institutions - Market Potential
Two
types of estimates have been developed on the following two
basis for the market potential of CHP systems in the U.S.:
-
Technical feasibility only, and
-
Combined technical and economic feasibility
Market
Potential Based on Technical Feasibility
The
Energy Information (EIA) Administration of DOE sponsored a
study to estimate the potential of CHP installations in
the U.S. According to this study, there are 1,431,805 buildings
in the United States that are suitable for CHP applications
requiring a capacity of 77,281 MW.
The
study focused on applications where thermal energy load was
in the form of steam or hot water, and did not take into consideration
use of thermal technologies, such as absorption chillers or
desiccant dehumidification, as part of the potential for thermal
load. Therefore, total potential could be even higher than
77, 281 MW.
The
study also estimates the total existing capacity of CHP installations
in the U.S. to be about 4,930 MW and that over 70% of the
existing facilities are under 1 MW, and are powered by small
reciprocating engines.
The potential commercial and institutional sectors that they
looked at were: hotels/motels, nursing homes, hospitals, schools,
colleges, commercial laundries, car washes, health clubs,
golf clubs, museums, correctional facilities, water treatment
plants, extended service restaurants, supermarkets and refrigerated
warehouses. The study identified 8 commercial/institutional
sector applications that they believe constitute 90% of the
installed commercial sector CHP. They are
-
Colleges and Universities
-
District Energy/Utilities
-
Government
-
Hospitals
-
Solid Waste (Landfill) Gas Recovery
-
Offices
-
Airports
-
Health/Sports Center
Installation
potential for CHP among various commercial sectors is estimated
to be as shown in the following chart.

On
a state-by-state basis, the ONSITE study estimated the following
potential:
According
to the Onsite study, the commercial sector has a large potential
for small size generators, in the ranges for small gas engines,
microturbines, and fuel cells.
Market
Potential Based on Combined Technical and Economic Feasibility
In 2002, a
market assessment conducted for DOE/ORNL reveals that
the potential building sector market for integrated energy
systems (IES) is almost 17GW in 2010, growing to over 35 GW
by 2020. For the purposes of this study IES systems include
CHP systems with absorption chillers, or engine-driven chillers
(EDC) where the heat rejected from the engine is recovered,
and combined heat and power (CHP)-only systems. This market
potential is based on achievable economics, where IES provides
a minimum payback period of 10 years compared against conventional
HVAC systems and purchasing electricity from the grid. Many
of the IES options analyzed provide payback periods much shorter
than 10 years, with a significant portion less than 4 years.
The
distribution of total market potential by 2020 among three
major types of IES is shown in the following figure. It shows
that the market potential for the CHP-only system is the highest
(22 GW).

According
to this study, the potential for IES is highest (10 GW) in
office buildings, as shown in the following figure. Hospitals
and colleges, while already established in CHP use, each offer
over 7 GW of potential for IES. Schools, retail, and hotels
are smaller segments, but with their significant heating and
cooling loads, offer additional IES potential. Military bases
also offer potential for IES, but generally for CHP-only systems.
Military bases do not generally have base-wide cooling distribution
systems.

The
IES market potential includes an increased use of absorption
chillers (8.9 million tons), thermal storage (3.2 million
tons), and more engine driven chillers (2.4 million tons).
Office buildings offer the maximum potential opportunities
(45% of the total potential or about 4.5 GW) for CHP with
absorption chillers (3.4 GW) and EDC (1.1 GW).
The market potential distribution by the size and the type
of CHP prime mover is shown in the following figure. It shows
that the total market potential is higher for engines than
for turbines. It also shows that the highest (9 GW) market
potential is for engines in the size range of 100-500 kW and
that the highest (4 GW) potential for turbines is in the size
range of 1-5 MW.

The
IES market potential by region is shown in the following figure.
It shows that the market potential is the highest in Pacific
region followed by Middle Atlantic and New England.

The
regional trend is consistent with the “Spark Spreads”
for these regions. “Spark Spread” is defined here
as difference between the average electricity price (from
EIA’s Electric Power Monthly) and the fuel cost of generating
electricity (calculated by heat rate of a natural gas engine
times average natural gas price from EIA’s Natural Gas
Monthly.) The geographic scope used in this study for various
regions is shown in the figure below.

The
study also examined a number of scenarios to evaluate how
sensitive the base case is to varying inputs. In doing so,
there was a focus on how reducing the first cost and improving
the efficiency of IES impact the market size. In addition,
three sensitivities were added to illustrate the effects of
changing energy prices on the IES market for buildings.
Overall
market potential results of the sensitivity analysis indicate
that reductions in the installed cost and improvement in efficiency
increase the market size dramatically. Both future scenarios
nearly double the market potential market from 35 GW to almost
70 GW.
One
important, but recognized, shortcoming of this market assessment
is the exclusion of Integrated Energy Systems (IES) employing
desiccant dehumidification technologies. A follow-up assessment
effort is planned that will include consideration of new ASHRAE
design moisture data and ventilation standard requirements
and will show likely penetration by IES/desiccant combination
systems and, as a result, will increase the total market potential.
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