Life Cycle Costing - in Asset Management ‘Unlocking Asset Intelligence’ ISPE 2011 Northwest Region – The Crowne Plaza, Liverpool on 24th November 2011 - Presented by Andrew Green Overview of the Presentation 1. Context of maintaining and renewal of assets • What is happening in the market place! • Unlocking life cycle asset intelligence 2. Standardising Life Cycle Asset Management: • Introducing the new rules of measurement • Key methodology, techniques and metrics 3. Putting the LCAM standards into practice: • ‘Fit for function’ maintenance standards • Setting and defending the combined budgets • Targeting investment and prioritisation works • Informing wider estate strategies 4. Summing up – key benefits of adopting a: • Standard, scalable and sustainable solution 5. Questions and answers 1 Life Cycle Asset Management is not rocket science! Shifting Thinking – Business Outcomes Focused Construction Design Operate Maintain Business Costs Business Outcomes Delivery Cycle Operational Life Cycle 2 What is Happening in the Maintenance Market ! ... Developing Competence Knowledge Based Excellence Optimized planning & decision making Repair as good as before Reactive – fix it when it breaks A “paradigm shift” in attitude from ‘cost focus’ to ‘business focus’ Integrated organization, systems & processes Proactive predictive maintenance Struggling with management systems Systems are a valuable tool - information is an asset Sound knowledge of cost, performance & risk relationships Proactive, preventive maintenance Learning Applying Embedding Maintenance is an expense Outsourced contracts to deliver value & cost savings Integrating Performance & Reliability Maintenance & Renewal Spend Innocence Optimizing Maintenance is an investment Unlocking life cycle asset intelligence ... ‘What can be measured can be evaluated, improved, directed – in short managed!’ Lord Kelvin What it contents: • Common asset data and cost structure …. (integrates construct, maintain and renewal) Maintenance & Renewals • Rules of measurement for R&M works • Functional unit costs (analysis/benchmarks) • Industry accepted methodology and metrics 3 Standardising Maintenance and Life Cycle Renewals BCIS Standard Form of Cost Analysis 4th Edition In Q2 2011 (NRM aligned for construction) Maintenance & Renewals Description Heating Source Boiler Plant Boiler Unit Shell and tube boilers (steam and hthw) Water tube boilers (steam and hthw) Electrode/electric boilers (steam and hthw) Shell and tube boilers (mthw/lthw) Water tube boilers (mthw/lthw) Electrode/electric boilers (mthw/lthw) Cast iron sectional boilers (mthw/lthw) Steel boilers (mthw/lthw) Condensing boilers (mthw/lthw) Modular boilers Domestic boiler - condensing Domestic boiler - combination Domestic gas fired boilers Burner Force Draught Gas Burner Atmospheric Burner Oil burners (pressure jet) Solid Fuel Burner Water Heater Electric Water Heater Instantaneous Water Heater Unvented Storage Heater HWS Cylinder (domestic type) Gas Fired Water Heater Solar Panel / Solar Thermal Calorifier & Heat Exchangers LPHW Calorifier LPHW Calorifiers - Copper LPHW Calorifers - Mild Steel Steam calorifier Steam Calorifiers - Copper Steam Calorifers - Mild Steel Heat Exchanger Heat Exchanger - Shell and Tube Heat Exchanger - Plate Evaporator Evaporator - Shell and Tube Evaporator - Coil Direct Expansion Trace Heating Cooling Source Chiller / Refrigeration Plant Packaged Chiller Centrifugal chiller Reciprocating chiller Screw chiller Absorption chiller Blast Chiller Service Life Maintainable Assets 20 25 25 20 25 25 25 20 20 15 15 10 10 BCIS Code HVCA SFG 20 Ref 05-20 Build 5E Code 05-19; 5E 05-19; 05-20 5E 5E 5E 5E 5E 5E 5E 5E 5E 5E 5E 05-19; 05-14; 05-14; 05-21; 05-14; 05-14; 05-04; 05-11 05-23; 05-29; 05-28; 15 20 15 15 5E 5E 5E 5E 05-(10-12); 07-03 05-(03-04); 07;01 05-13; 07-(04-07) 05-(25-27) 12 8 12 30 12 25 5D 5D 5D 5D 5D 5D 32-15 32-14 32-09; 32-13 32-15 32-13 53-01 25 20 5D 5D 32-(05-07) 32-(05-07) 25 20 5E 5E 32-(05-07) 32-(05-07) 25 15 5E 5E 20 20 20 5F 5F 5D, 5E, 5F 19-01 19-01 40-03 20 20 25 25 20 5F 5F 5F 5F 09-02; 09-02; 09-02; 03-04; Life Expectancy 05-20 05-23 05-23 05-22 05-23 05-23 05;10;05-12; 05-13 PPM Tasks 05-30 Including Task Times & Skilling 32-(05-07) 29-(06-07) 12-03 12-01 12-02 09-05 4 Putting the LCAM standards into practice How ‘LCAM can help to set and defend budgets optimise and maintain the assets sustainably!’ Principles of Life Cycle Asset Management (LCAM) Holistic Sustainable Systemic Integrated Knowledge based Optimal Risk based Source: BS PAS 55: 2008 5 British Standard 8544 - for LCC of Maintenance Integrated process of LCC of constructed assets How to ‘Plan, capture, evaluate and then implement maintenance and renewal programmes sustainably!’ Practice guidance on how to: 1 Set ‘Functional maintenance standards 2 Understand the impact of funding and not funding life cycle asset investment works 3. Prioritise and optimise the actual spend v business needs/wants, risks & budget limits Improve decision making and business plans: A Setting and defending the total LCC budgets B Targeting investment and prioritisation works C Informing wider estate strategies – (e.g. the estate rationalisation; sustainability agenda) Functional Maintenance Standards PROFIT REVENUE RUNNING COST Business Critical Compliance Renewals Commercial Use of Built Environment 6 Functional Maintenance Standards Admin & Support Buildings Building Fabric Fire Alarms General Infrastructure SSOW Perimeter Fencing Project Delivery HV Systems Laboratories Steam Packaging Clean Rooms Equipment The The White White Powder Powder CCTV Packaging Clean Equipment Rooms R&D Space by FunctionProcess 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Asset Management GMP Maintenance Calibration Life Calibration Support Product Product Pressure Pressure Vessels Vessels Process Water Indirect infrastructure Permits Condition Reporting Access GMP 9% Plant Systems operations Systems Compressed Process space 5% Air AnimalBuilding space 12%Procurement Control space Laboratory 39% & Stores Management Office Systems 24% Energy Plant 2% Management Water Others 9% Treatment 100% Voice & Data Refrigeration Roads & Paths Lighting Direct infrastructure Functional Maintenance Standards Virtual Station ‘Customised FMS’ Model Standardising ‘Applicable’ asset types • Portfolio categorisation • Infrastructure elements • Assets and sub components Asset management strategy • Regulatory (minimum) • Fit for function (optimal) Defined responsibility for : • Maintainable assets • Renewal of assets Asset assessment rules/ measures 7 Functional Maintenance Standards Creation of minimum / optimal regimes (Customisation of SFG20/SFG30 tasks) Compliance and Fit for function models: 1 Agree ‘Applicable asset types’ 2 Regulatory; legal assets (C) 3 Criticality ranking assets (C) 4 Energy focused assets (C) 5 Proactive task schedules (C) 6 Mothball tasks -vacate sites (C) How Well Are Our Assets Performing ? SPACE UTILIZATION ENERGY/CARBON & ENVIRONMENTAL PERFORMANCE FUNCTIONAL SUITABILITY PHYSICAL CONDITION & REMAINING LIFE SAFETY, SECURITY & COMPLIANCE FINANCIAL OTHER FORMS 8 How Well Are Our Assets Performing ? FUNCTION CONDITION INDEXING (FCI): FCI = Excellent £3m total cost of identified actions -------------------------------------------------------current reinstatement value (CRV) Good Fair £20m Poor Refurb/De-invest trigger? 0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 50% 100% How Well Are Our Assets Performing ? 9 Identifying the Risks of the LCAM works P1,2,3 RISK RANKING: P1 – Regulatory P2 – Function Critical P3 – Other Criteria Transparency of Assessment Prioritises – P1 list 10 Impact of Funding P1’s – Compliance Works! Impact of Funding all P1, P2 and P3 Works 11 How Well Are Our Assets Performing ? Tonbridge R&D Site 4 Unknown Derelict WareSite R&D Poor 4 Fair Unknown Good Derelict Pilot Plant Plant Solvent Store Warehouse lC or e c ia St lu b an Pl So ac e Sp ss ce ra y /P ro bo to r La ra e/ bo f ic Of fic e/ La Of Of fic e/ La bo La ra bo to r to r y/ yS An pa im ce al fic e pa Of ce e ac ry S al im An p 0 t Offices Building Function Type rat o Laboratory Space 1 s Conferencing Facilities Excellent en Amenities Good 2 or ks ho 0 Fair Sp 1 Poor iti e 2 3 W N u m b e r o f B u ild in g s Excellent Am N u m b e r o f B u ild in g s 3 Building Function Type FCI Estate Profiling by Function 12 FCI’s and other Building Performance Ratings Asset Performance Ratings Asset performance indicators have been tested to measure asset condition at an Establishment and Building level and inform investment planning Facility Condition Index Building Performance Ratings Excellent Business Impact Good Fair Poor A [No loss of places] Refurbishment Trigger 0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 50% B [Loss of regime] C [Loss of prisoner places] 100% Safety & Security • The current condition of the facility can be quantified using the total estimated cost for all identified maintenance actions and the current replacement value (CRV) of the facility. • The facility condition index, or FCI, is defined as follows; A B C [Complies [Minor actions [Identified with to comply] contraventions] regulations] Capacity A [Capacity Available] Value of identified maintenance actions Current replacement value D [Seriously at risk] B [Approaching capacity] C [At capacity] D [Beyond capacity] LCC Indexation of the Total ‘Cost in Use’ Ratio e.g. 0.1; 1; 10+ Fees to Capital Building Works to the Total Cost Occupancy Cost (TOC) Write Down Occupy Costs Key O&M = Operations & Maintenance Cost Churn Build Cost 1.0 2 to 3 % per annum – business usage (Depending on type of functional use) 1 to 1.5 % per annum on business moves Renewals 1 to 2 % per annum on asset investment Maintain 1.0 to 1.5 % per annum Design Fees 0.1 Asset depreciation / finance provision (dependent on value of capitalised assets) 5.0+ TOC RATIO to CAPITAL BUILD COSTS (Based on a 60 year life corporate facility) 13 Key Performance & Cost Indicators Facilities Assessments, Inspections & Audits Functional Life Cycle Investment Planning ASSET INTELLIGENCE Annual Operating Costs Plan, Optimise and Manage the Budgets Sustainably Cyclical Asset Investment Integrating the Capital and Revenue Costs Capital and Maintenance Programmes Annualised Repairs and Maintenance Regime Integrating the Capital and Revenue Costs Portfolio by Region – Q3 2008 30% Average 25% Functional 20% Life Cycle 15% Investment 10% Planning FCI range Plan, Optimise and Manage the Budgets Sustainably Cyclical Asset Investment Facilities Condition Index (FCI) 5% 0% UK Sites Key Performance & Cost Indicators ASSET INTELLIGENCE US Sites EMEA Sites ASIA Sites Capital and Maintenance Programmes Cost £ per annum /sq ft Facilities Assessments, Inspections & Audits Annual Operating Costs Maintenance Cost Per Annum UK UKWest Corporate London & Real R&D Estate Sites – Q3 2008 30.0 Annualised Repairs and Maintenance Regime Average cost per annum 25.0 20.0 15.0 10.0 5.0 0.0 Pilot Plants Labs Buildings A/C Offices Support Facilities 14 Innovative Use of Technology and Systems Capital Planning Asset Management Plans Informing Budgeting & Optimising Life Cycle Spend Data Repository, Fund Modelling & Optimise Spend Programming (CAIP) Funding Strategies Facilities Condition Assessment Standardise Asset Reviews (Forms & Use of IT) Life Cycle Costing Prioritisation Assets Status and Life Cycle Data Repairs & Maintenance Resources Service Models Maintenance Management (CMMS) Transforming How to Integrate the Process and Create a Sustainable Model Capture Cyclical Asset Investment Planning (CAIP) Tool Portfolio Data Report Client Specific Outputs Assessment Data (Condition + ANO) Analysis Occupancy Data (Costs /energy data) Actions Review Decide Control Data Repository Fund Modelling (Impacts v Risks) Planned Items (Strategies & Timescales 1,5.10 year +) Performance Ratings (FCI/RII etc ) KEY FEATURES & FUNCTIONALITY Monitoring & Optimise Programmes of Works Programming Do/Defer/Not Do Project delivery (Rescheduling) 15 Evidence Based – Unlocking Asset Intelligence Assurance of Compliance • Legal and mandatory compliance • Not under or over maintaining the estate Target investment spend • Quantified risks & liabilities v funds • Fund modelling (by function/ assets) Drive maintenance plans • Setting and defending budgets • Prioritised / risk based (P1 to P3) • Inform strategic estate planning: - (rationalisation/ closure studies) - (capital project programming) - (sustainability commitments) Opens up the possibility to do BIM Maintenance & Renewals 16 Summing Up – Benefits of LCAM Benefits of LCAM LCAM provides a structured, integrated and agile approach to managing, over time, the Business’s requirements of Infrastructure & Property assets to meet corporate business objectives and drivers. Evidence knowledge based model, to inform: Strategic decisions: focus on the medium to long term requirements for investment in Property and Facilities to meet longer term corporate objectives. Operational decisions: focusing on the ongoing management of the portfolio and individual properties within agreed budgetary limits as identified within the strategic estate plans. Any Questions? 17