Seize control of energy savings March 1st 2010
We are constantly being urged to fit inverter drives and save
energy.However, Jeff Whiting, energy spokesman for
Mitsubishi Electric's Energy Centre, says we should not
overlook their sister technology – controls
Disciplines we learn in one field can
sometimes be applied to others and
yield useful results. Recently, for
instance, I focused on the latest Machinery
Directive to identify some of the design
requirements of industrial equipment to
minimise risk and make the equipment safe.
The standard process is well defined and I
feel that some of the assessment approach
could be modified and applied to
minimising energy within our processes.
BS EN ISO 14121 (Risk Assessment)
encourages a three-stage process to safety:
Design out as many safety problems as
possible; then those that can't be removed
through mechanical and control design are
brought under control with a
safety solution light curtain,
guard, etc. The final
approach is through user
information, such as
instructions, limitations
of use and training.
This process, in
principle, could be applied to
energy engineering. The
assessment process would
then become: to design out
energy consumption where possible through
the mechanical and control
philosophy; to apply energy
saving technologies such as
inverter drives; and to provide
information and training to
minimise any other energy
requirements that may require
localised input.
More people are
recognising the value of
energy saving technologies,
but what about designing
out unnecessary losses in
the first place? Many
elements of a machine are
left running for major parts
of their duty cycle without
any useful function taking
place. In many cases it would be possible to
switch them off when not operating; powering
them up just before they are needed.Main
culprits include lights, fans and pumps. To
this you can add HMIs and other unmanned
display/ control panels, possibly chillers or
air conditioning, conveyors, and so on. It
may feel like the energy savings will not
warrant the effort required, but some rough
calculations on the back of an envelope may
well change your mind.
When designing a machine engineers
primarily think functionally: what are we
making, how can we do that, what processes
are involved? Energy considerations, where
they are considered, usually come low down
the list. Yet it costs nothing to think about
energy as a primary part of the project brief.
If heat is involved, can a smaller amount be
applied more accurately; if cooling is
required, can this be done intermittently
rather than constantly; can the length of
conveyor runs be cut; can conveyor speeds be
slowed without impacting productivity; would
reversing a plant's layout change lifting tasks to
lowering ones; how many lights on a machine
could be left off for long periods of time?
Many of these questions could also be
asked of existing machinery, but this brings
up a universal problem. People would rather
muddle on as they are, using the well known
mantra, 'If it ain't broke… Don't fix it!'
People come up with all sorts of reasons for
not undertaking change. A good manager
will work through these and properly assess
the potential that change can unlock. The
same observation is true with new build.
Design teams will generally have established
ways of working and may not welcome the
further dimension to the project of trying to
'sort out the energy before the machine is
built'. Probably the most common objection
to an energy saving initiative is that it will
cost too much. This is often not the case.
Most machines have a relatively sophisticated
control system that can be re-programmed
to help minimise energy consumption. A few
well-chosen sensors will say switch off empty
conveyors, power down HMIs and lighting
when there is nobody present, control
temperatures to set levels, and so on.
Many control technologies have energy
saving options readily available. SCADA and
DCS software systems can easily integrate
with operational and enterprise processes to
provide energy data and control; PLCs can
optimise the local processes
and gain optimal energy
requirements from
management systems. In
fact, usually the same
control networks from the
manufacturing cell through to
complete factory can be
used to monitor and
control energy with little
or no extra cabling
requirements. Individual
calculations would be needed, but extra
equipment often pays back in energy saving
in just a few months. Given that the life
expectancy of automation equipment in the
UK is 12 years+, substantial returns during
the life of the machine can be expected.
Let's quantify savings we could reasonably
expect.Many public buildings have been
retrofitted with BMSs in recent years: a study
of performance suggests that this leads to an
average reduction in annual energy bills of
15 to 20%. In energy-hungry industrial
processes, a 20% energy saving could be
significant to the bottom line of the business.
It's reasonable to take this as a rule of
thumb and say a plant/machine designed for
energy efficiency will be one-fifth cheaper to
own and run.Look at how car engine
efficiencies have changed the market, when
engineers got serious about energy
performance. More articles from Mitsubishi Electric Europe: |