Department of Navy Energy Program Prepared for: Association of Defense Communities February 15, 2011 Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Energy, Installations & Environment) 1 Federal Mandates •Key Legal Compliance Drivers •30% Energy Efficiency Increase (in Mbtu/KSF) by 2015 (Energy Independence and Security Act (EISA) 2007) •25% Renewable Energy Production by 2025 (NDAA’10) •Advanced metering and annual energy audits by 2012 (Energy Policy Act 2005 and EISA’07) •20% decrease in NTV fleet fuel by 2015 and Alt Fueling stations (EISA’07) •Analysis and plan to address vulnerability of critical assets (NDAA’10) •SECNAV Shore Energy Goals •50% Alternative Energy Ashore / 50% Net-Zero Installations by 2020 •50% decrease in Non-Tactical Vehicle fossil fuel consumption by 2015 •Improve Energy Security by identifying shore energy supply infrastructure vulnerabilities Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Energy, Installations & Environment) 2 Navy Shore Energy Strategy Embrace Sensible Partnering Leverage Technology Transform Culture and Behavior Strategic Communication • All Echelons Look Externally for Win/Win Opportunities • Watch, Partner, Lead Framework to Assess New Technologies • Enabled by Technology • Individual, Command and Functional Levels • Tactical Comms for Stakeholder Groups • Overarching Themes Energy Security and Legal Compliance Actual and Planned Strategy Impact Efficiency First Navy Culture & Behavior Renewable Energy & Sustainability 30% Energy Efficiency Increase by 2015 (EISA’07) 25% Renewable Energy Production by 2025 (NDAA’10) Advanced Metering and Annual Audits (EPAct’05, EISA’07) Critical Assets Plan (NDAA’10) Navy Energy Consumption (TBTU/YR) Governance • Codified in 4100.5E • Coordinates subordinate/supporti ng plans and guidance 50 Reduce Consumption to Simultaneously Achieve Mandates 40 EISA’07 30% Efficiency Mandate 30 20 Actual Planned 10 Current & Planned Renewable Energy Production 2003 2014 Increasing Energy Efficiency And Transforming Behavior Will Make Alternative Energy Goals More Attainable. Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Energy, Installations & Environment) 2025 3 Strategy Details and Successes Renewable & Sustainability New Construction/ Major Renovations LEED Silver or equiv. – Energy/ water efficiency – Recyclable Materials – CO2 Emissions Reduction Integrated Technology Strategy – Watch Industry-led tech and invest when/where viable and mission allows • Solar Energy (Ex: Ford Island PV) • Wind Energy (Ex: SNI, Newport) – Partner at all echelons to develop needed technology w/ key stakeholders • Smart Grid – Lead development of mission critical and game changing technologies • Tidal and Ocean Energy RDT&E • Innovative Geothermal Assistant Secretary of the Navy Energy Efficiency First Recapitalize Existing Infrastructure with more energy efficient systems – Energy Return on Investment – Decision Model for Utility and Facility Upgrades Annual Energy Audits – Building level assessments of opportunities – 25% of Navy Covered Facilities/ year – Added Base Renewable Energy analysis Energy Security – Energy Security Audit Program Navy Culture & Behavior Increased transparency at Individual, Command, and Function Levels – Resident Energy Conservation Program Mock billing - 7.6% reduction over four months Technology Enabled – 13,000 Advanced Meters (AMI) in place by end of FY11 – NDW SmartGrid Pilot: Secure integration of AMI w/ Utility and Facility management systems – Tailored Installation Goals for 50% reduction as a Navy-Wide Goal Link to Operations – Identify even greater opportunities for energy and cost savings beyond facility upgrades (Energy, Installations & Environment) 4 Alternative Energy Ashore and Net Zero Installations Total Installed: 5.7+ MW Total Planned: 100 MW Monterey Bay Planning Rooftop Solar • 13MW China Lake Solar • MCB Camp Lejeune (up to 5 MW) • MCB Camp Pendleton (2.8 MW) • Solar MAC SW, Hawaii (96 MW) Waste to Energy MCLB Albany May 2010 • NAVFAC SW is exploring European and Asian best practices for ASN recommendations • Spring 2011 – UCLANAVFAC SW Forum to discuss state of technology, partnership Assistant Secretary of the Navy Wind MCLB Barstow Total Installed: 6+ MW Total Planned: 4 MW Planning • 4 MW in Guam • 22 anemometer studies underway Advanced Metering • DON has awarded 7,679 out of 14,211 electric meters in FY09 and FY10 • DON pursuing 95% tracking of all electricity (Energy, Installations & Environment) 5 Geothermal Energy Navy Geothermal Power • Coso Facilities – China Lake, CA NAVY I Power Plant – Operational since 1987 – 270MW Max net output Drilling Rig – Enough power to supply electricity to 180,000 homes • Awarded NAS Fallon NV Department of Interior • Working with the Bureau of Land Management in exploring additional well sites Assistant Secretary of the Navy – Plant Sized at 30 MW • Exploring NAF El Centro (CA), MCAGCC Twenty-Nine Palms (CA), MCAS Yuma (AZ), NAS Fallon (NV) (Energy, Installations & Environment) 6 Ocean Power • Ocean Power pilots to demonstrate ocean renewable energy •OTEC – developing designs and critical components •Wave Buoy – 3rd generation buoy tied to grid •Tidal turbine – undergoing environmental review prior to deployment Assistant Secretary of the Navy OTEC, Hi Wave Buoy, HI Tidal Turbine, Puget Sound (Energy, Installations & Environment) 7 Green/High Performance Buildings DON’s Energy Code is 16% more stringent than California’s Title 24 – the most stringent state energy code in U.S. Navy and USMC sustainability 1998/1999 Great Lakes recruit barracks first certified (LEED Version 1.0) LEED-Silver required since 2006 First military department to require LEEDSilver certification of new construction 25 Buildings currently certified by USGBC LEED rating system NAS Jacksonville – LEED Silver First “Green” Navy Hanger 9% of the certified government buildings 300 projects registered with USGBC 2 are hangars (industrial buildings) 2010 – 4 Buildings certified (3 Gold, 1 Silver) NAB Little Creek, VA– LEED Silver Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Energy, Installations & Environment) 8 LEED Implementation The Navy has 25 projects certified with the US Green Building Council for LEED CDC, NAS Oceana, Va Beach, VA - Silver Drill Hall, Great Lakes, IL – Gold Certified projects include: • Child Development Centers • Bachelor’s Quarters • Administration Buildings • Hangars BQ, NS Everett, Bremerton, WA - Gold Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Energy, Installations & Environment) 9 9 Petroleum Reduction in non-Tactical Vehicles DON will reduce petroleum use in the commercial fleet by 50% by 2015, through the increased use of flex fuel, hybrid electric, and neighborhood electric vehicles. Navy Initiatives • 35% of fleet is alternative fueled capable vehicles • 1000 gas vehicles replaced with neighborhood electric vehicles Currently: 30 E85/B20, 12 CNG stations Planned: 2 E85, B20, 2 Electric stations planned Marine Corps Initiatives • 24% of fleet is alternative fueled capable vehicles • 340 conventional vehicles replaced with neighborhood electric vehicles Currently: 17 E85/B20, 7 CNG, 1 Hydrogen stations Planned: 4 E85 and 1 Hydrogen stations planned Baseline based on FY2009 • Marine Corps: 6.8MM gallons • Navy: 9.3MM gallons Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Energy, Installations & Environment) 10 Non-Tactical Vehicles Hydrogen Fuel Infrastructure and Vehicles Project •DEMONSTRATES H2 FUEL CELL VEHICLE FUELING, OPERATIONS & MAINTENANCE •ADVANCES HYDROGEN FUEL CELL VEHICLE TECHNICAL MATURITY FOR COMMERCIALIZATION AND POTENTIAL MILITARY APPLICATION •MAY INCLUDE OTHER HYDROGEN POWERED VEHICLES BUSES, AIRCRAFT TUGS, FUEL CELL EMERGENCY RESPONSE VEHICLES WITH EXPORTABLE ELECTRIC POWER AFV/Electric Vehicle Fleet Growth & Infrastructure •OVER 600 LOW SPEED ELECTRIC VEHICLES ALREADY IN SERVICE RECENT/CURRENT INITIATIVES Assistant Secretary of the Navy 11 January 2010 (Energy, Installations & Environment)