Building Technologies Office Prioritization Tool, 69839-69843 [2013-27941]
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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 225 / Thursday, November 21, 2013 / Notices
proposed information collection or to
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please write to the Department of the
Army, Army Safety Office, Chief of Staff
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Greg Komp, telephone (703) 601–2405.
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Dated: November 15, 2013.
Aaron Siegel,
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Officer, Department of Defense.
[FR Doc. 2013–27877 Filed 11–20–13; 8:45 am]
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DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
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Correction
In notice document 2013–27559
appearing on pages 69398–69402 in the
issue of November 19, 2013, make the
following correction:
On page 69398, in the first column, in
the 21st line from the bottom, ‘‘February
18, 2014’’ should read ‘‘January 21,
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[FR Doc. C1–2013–27559 Filed 11–20–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 1505–01–D
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
DOE/NSF High Energy Physics
Advisory Panel
Department of Energy, Office of
Science.
ACTION: Notice of Open Meeting.
AGENCY:
This notice announces a
meeting of the DOE/NSF High Energy
Physics Advisory Panel (HEPAP). The
Federal Advisory Committee Act (Pub.
L. 92–463, 86 Stat. 770) requires that
public notice of these meetings be
announced in the Federal Register.
DATES: Friday, December 6, 2013; 9:00
a.m.–6:00 p.m. Saturday, December 7,
2013; 9:00 a.m.–4:00 p.m.
ADDRESSES: Gaithersburg Marriott, 9751
Washingtonian Boulevard, Gaithersburg,
Maryland 20878.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: John
Kogut, Executive Secretary; High Energy
Physics Advisory Panel; U.S.
Department of Energy; SC–25/
Germantown Building, 1000
Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20585–1290;
Telephone: (301) 903–1298.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Purpose of Meeting: To provide
advice and guidance on a continuing
basis to the Department of Energy and
the National Science Foundation on
scientific priorities within the field of
high energy physics research.
Tentative Agenda: Agenda will
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SUMMARY:
December 6–7, 2013
• Discussion of Department of Energy
High Energy Physics Program
• Discussion of National Science
Foundation Elementary Particle
Physics Program
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• Reports on and Discussions of Topics
of General Interest in High Energy
Physics
• Public Comment (10-minute rule)
Public Participation: The meeting is
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meeting. If you would like to file a
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Minutes: The minutes of the meeting
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https://science.energy.gov/hep/hepap/
meetings/.
Issued at Washington, DC, on November
15, 2013.
LaTanya R. Butler,
Deputy Committee Management Officer.
[FR Doc. 2013–27939 Filed 11–20–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Building Technologies Office
Prioritization Tool
Office of Energy Efficiency and
Renewable Energy, Department of
Energy.
ACTION: Request for information (RFI).
AGENCY:
The U.S. Department of
Energy’s (DOE) Building Technologies
Office (BTO) developed the
Prioritization Tool to improve its
programmatic decision-making. The tool
provides an objective framework for
most energy-saving measures and
scenarios, as well as methodology,
comparing long-term benefits and enduser costs applied to various markets,
end-uses, and lifetimes. Currently, BTO
seeks comments and information related
to the Prioritization Tool that improves
the tool’s accuracy and applicability for
technology planning within BTO.
Specifically, this notice solicits
comments and information on data,
assumptions and outputs of various
energy efficiency technologies and
SUMMARY:
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activities analyzed by the Prioritization
Tool.
DATES: Responses to this RFI must be
submitted electronically to BTO_P_
Tool_RFI@go.doe.gov no later than 5:00
p.m. (EST) on December 24, 2013.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
Patrick Phelan, U.S. Department of
Energy, Office of Energy Efficiency and
Renewable Energy, Building
Technologies Office, EE 2J, 1000
Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20585–0121.
Telephone: (202) 287–1906. Email:
patrick.phelan@ee.doe.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Background
A. Program Overview
B. Prioritization Tool Description
C. Methodology
D. Inputs and Outputs
II. Purpose
III. Disclaimer and Important Notes
IV. Proprietary Information
V. Evaluation and Administration by Federal
and Non-Federal Personnel
VI. Request for Information Categories and
Questions
A. Category 1
B. Category 2
C. Category 3
D. Category 4
E. Category 5
F. Category 6
I. Background
A. Program Overview
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The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)
Building Technologies Office (BTO)
focuses on three key areas in order to
develop innovative and cost-effective
energy saving solutions:
• Supporting research and development
of high impact building technologies
• Accelerating market penetration of
technologies that will save the
country energy by assisting to
overcome key market barriers
• Organizing and facilitating
enforcement of minimum efficiency
standards and building codes to
ensure energy savings within
buildings.
BTO has developed a new technology
prioritization framework to provide
analytical support for its programmatic
decision-making in order to further
accelerate the transformation of the U.S.
building energy efficiency sector.
B. Prioritization Tool Description
The tool was designed to inform
programmatic decision-making and
facilitate the setting of programmatic
goals. It also allows the evaluation of
‘‘what if’’ scenarios when pursuing
potential competing energy efficiency
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measures, and it ultimately helps the
BTO to create Funding Opportunity
Announcements (FOAs) objectives.
Currently, the tool contains data on over
500 energy efficiency measures along
with their markets. It has the capability
to perform extensive analyses using
established methodology for calculating
energy savings potential and the costs of
conserved energy associated with each
measure.
The Prioritization Tool enables open
and objective comparison of hundreds
of technology and market-based
investment opportunities available to
BTO. The energy efficiency measures
identified in the tool cover a spectrum
of market opportunities, including
residential and commercial buildings,
new and existing buildings, as well as
industrial and outdoor applications.
Most of the measures considered fall
within one of BTO’s main focus areas in
building energy end-use sectors:
• Heating, ventilation and airconditioning (HVAC)
• Water heating
• Appliances
• Lighting
• Windows
• Envelope: insulation and roofing
• Sensors and controls
• Miscellaneous electric loads
The tool strives to be comprehensive by
including most known energy efficiency
measures proven to save energy;
laboratory-demonstrated, field-tested,
analytically derived (with peer review)
savings, and inclusive by integrating
inputs from hundreds of sources and
expert reviews.
While BTO has identified over five
hundred energy efficiency measures, it
chose to narrow the scope of analysis to
focus on the most promising measures
that have the greatest potential for
energy savings across the United States.
By excluding measures based on the
following predefined criteria, BTO has
created a portfolio consisting of 261
measures which, by using the
Prioritization Tool, were subsequently
subjected to a more extensive
quantitative analysis to assure only the
highest impact measures are the focus of
further effort. The approach was first for
BTO to focus on technologies which had
the highest data quality (i.e., where
peer-reviewed energy efficiency and
cost data are available in published
reports or from technology experts).
Then, measures were excluded from
further analysis if they:
• Offered low energy savings
potential (less than 100 TBtu in the year
2030);
• Involved fuel switching (unless the
analysis team deemed a technology as
important to assess);
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• Had one or more significant market
barriers;
• Were deemed impractical by the
analysis team;
• Were already included in the
Annual Energy Outlook (AEO) 2010
baseline, which takes into account
known technologies, technological and
demographic trends, and current laws
and regulations.
These criteria were considered as
general guidelines; exceptions for
certain promising or cost effective
measures were made on a case-by-case
basis based on expert analysis. Finally,
BTO analyzed and prioritized, both
individually and in the context of the
full portfolio of measures, all 261
measures having relatively high energy
savings potential and significant ability
to compete in the market place.
C. Methodology
The BTO Prioritization Tool uses
established methodologies to evaluate
under a variety of scenarios the
incremental lifetime costs of a measure’s
energy savings potential. The tool
calculates potential savings at the
national or regional level and compares
the results to a business-as-usual
baseline defined in the U.S. Energy
Information Administration’s (EIA)
Annual Energy Outlook 2010 (AEO).1
The following scenarios are used for the
prioritization analysis and represent
potential annual energy savings
associated for each measure:
• Technical Potential is the annual
energy savings achieved by instant
replacement of all technically suitable
existing stock in 2010 and beyond with
the proposed measure, regardless of
cost. Although the technical potential
cannot be realized, it provides an upper
bound to the maximum energy savings
that can be achieved by the proposed
measure assuming instant and complete
market adoption of the technology.
• Maximum Adoption Potential is the
total annual savings based on
deployment of the evaluated measure
given 100% market penetration for all
end-of-life or accelerated replacements
and new purchases or new construction
installations. The entire existing stock is
replaced at an accelerated schedule for
cases when a retrofit opportunity is cost
effective, which means the present
value of the energy savings of other
efficiency measures exceeds the full,
installed cost of the evaluated efficiency
measure. Therefore, it becomes
1 https://www.eia.gov/oiaf/aeo/pdf/
0383(2010).pdf. The AEO provides annual
projections through the year 2035 of national
equipment stock and energy consumption based on
end-use, type of fuel, geographic region, and type
of building or home.
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economically rational to replace all of
the currently deployed stock
immediately with the efficiency
measure. This scenario corresponds to
the least expensive means to deploy a
given efficiency measure into the
marketplace. This potential is also
referred to as Unstaged Maximum
Adoption Potential.
• Staged Maximum Adoption
Potential adjusts the savings of the
Maximum Adoption Potential to avoid
double-counting energy savings for
measures with overlapping markets
within a given portfolio. For example,
the installation of compact fluorescent
light bulbs would reduce the potential
energy savings from light-emitting
diodes (LEDs). The savings of the
lowest-cost measures are accounted for
first.
• Adoption-Based Potential uses the
Bass diffusion model2 2 to represent a
more realistic potential impact on
energy savings in the marketplace. This
scenario allows simulation of the DOE
programs’ impact on measure diffusion
and assumes that research and
development and deployment activities
would accelerate market introduction. It
also allows for evaluation of standards
by replacing all purchased stock with
the technology being evaluated once a
standard is set in place. For this RFI,
outputs from this scenario are not
available but will be addressed in future
publications.
For the unstaged and staged
Maximum Adoption Potential scenarios,
the tool also calculates the levelized
cost of conserved energy (CCE), which
is an annualized value of discounted
costs and benefits of each measure.
More specifically, the CCE allows
comparison of end-user costs per unit of
conserved energy for each measure. The
end-user cost refers to the difference in
capital, operations, and maintenance
costs between the measure being
analyzed and a typical baseline,
adjusted for potential cost differences
resulting from the variation in lifetimes
between the proposed measure and the
baseline. CCE is used during staging
analysis, which involves adjusting the
energy savings of each measure by
taking into account competition for
savings within the same or overlapping
markets, and allocating savings within
specific markets to measures with the
lowest unstaged CCE first.
Consequently, the staged CCE is
calculated based on adjusted staged
savings. Hence the staged CCE is
defined as the annualized value of
2 Bass, F.M., 1969, ‘‘A New Product Growth
Model for Consumer Durables,’’ Management
Science, Vol. 15, pp. 215–227.
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discounted cost per unit of conserved
energy after staging of energy savings for
each measure. Results are presented for
both unstaged and staged scenarios by
graphing unstaged or staged CCE versus
unstaged or staged Maximum Adoption
Potential savings, respectively.
For further overview, discussion and
examples of how the Prioritization Tool
analyses are conducted, please view the
video presentation at https://media.
navigant.com/videotest/EN_
DOEWebex_VID_0913.html. For more
detailed description and discussion of
the methodologies underlying the BTO
Prioritization Tool’s analytical
capabilities, as well as its outputs,
caveats, and functions, refer to the
National Renewable Energy Laboratory
(NREL) Technical Report: NREL/TP–
6A20–54799, available at https://www.
nrel.gov/docs/fy12osti/54799.pdf.
D. Inputs and Outputs
DOE seeks comments and information
on measure inputs and assumptions
used by the BTO Prioritization Tool as
well as the outputs generated by the
tool. The details of the inputs and
outputs for the defined portfolio of 261
measures are provided in the
spreadsheet, available at https://eereexchange.energy.gov/Default.aspx?
Search=prioritization%20tool&Search
Type=#FoaIdc83baeea-4a16-48fa-a1237c03796b503b and titled: RFI
attachments_v11. The spreadsheet is
divided into eight energy end-uses:
Heating, ventilation and airconditioning (HVAC), water heating,
envelope, windows, appliances, sensors
and controls, lighting, and
miscellaneous electric loads (MELs).
Information on each end-use is
presented in two tabs: An input tab that
contains relevant input information on
each measure and an output tab that
contains the analytical results for the
year 2030. The inputs include data,
calculations and assumptions based on
the sources listed for each energy
efficiency measure. More specifically,
the inputs include a description of each
measure, targeted market sector, typical
technology life expectancy, energy
consumption, and installed costs for
both the baseline and high-efficiency
measures. It also includes the
percentage energy savings and cost
premium of an efficient measure
compared to the baseline measure. DOE
also seeks comments and information
with regard to the tool’s outputs, which
include estimated Technical Potential
energy savings, Unstaged Maximum
Adoption Potential savings, unstaged
cost of conserved energy (CCE), Staged
Maximum Adoption Potential savings,
and staged CCE for each measure in the
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69841
year 2030. Each column of the
spreadsheet referenced above contains
specific input or output data, and is
annotated with a comment box that
further explains the data in that column.
For further information on the
Prioritization Tool’s individual measure
inputs, refer to its notes and references
columns. For further information on the
tool’s outputs, refer to NREL TP 6A20–
54799 and the BTO video presentation,
which can be found at links referenced
above.
II. Purpose
The purpose of this RFI is to solicit
comments and information from
industry, academia, research
laboratories, government agencies, and
other stakeholders on input and output
data for all measures evaluated in the
tool. DOE seeks data on new measures
that may be missing from the tool or
measures that have not been evaluated
but have potential for significant
national energy savings. This is solely a
request for information and not a
Funding Opportunity Announcement
(FOA). EERE is not accepting
applications for funding related to this
RFI at this time.
III. Disclaimer and Important Notes
This RFI is not a Funding
Opportunity Announcement (FOA);
therefore, EERE is not accepting
applications at this time. EERE may
issue a FOA in the future based on or
related to the content and responses to
this RFI; however, EERE may also elect
not to issue a FOA. There is no
guarantee that a FOA will be issued as
a result of this RFI. Responding to this
RFI does not provide any advantage or
disadvantage to potential applicants if
EERE chooses to issue a FOA regarding
the subject matter. Final details,
including the anticipated award size,
quantity, and timing of EERE funded
awards, will be subject to Congressional
appropriations and direction.
Any information obtained as a result
of this RFI is intended to be used by the
Government on a non-attribution basis
for planning and strategy development;
this RFI does not constitute a formal
solicitation for proposals or abstracts.
Your response to this notice will be
treated as information only. EERE will
review and consider all responses in its
formulation of program strategies for the
identified materials of interest that are
the subject of this request. In accordance
with the Federal Acquisition
Regulations, 48 CFR 15.201(e),
responses to this notice are not offers
and cannot be accepted by the
Government to form a binding contract.
EERE will not provide reimbursement
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for costs incurred in responding to this
RFI. Respondents are advised that DOE
is under no obligation to acknowledge
receipt of the information received or
provide feedback to respondents with
respect to any information submitted
under this RFI. Responses to this RFI do
not bind EERE to any further actions
related to this topic.
IV. Proprietary Information
Because information received in
response to this RFI may be used to
structure future programs and FOAs
and/or otherwise be made available to
the public, respondents are strongly
advised to NOT include any information
in their responses that might be
considered business sensitive,
proprietary, or otherwise confidential.
If, however, a respondent chooses to
submit business sensitive, proprietary,
or otherwise confidential information, it
must be clearly and conspicuously
marked as such in the response.
Responses containing confidential,
proprietary, or privileged information
must be conspicuously marked as
described below. Failure to comply with
these marking requirements may result
in the disclosure of the unmarked
information under the Freedom of
Information Act or otherwise. The U.S.
Federal Government is not liable for the
disclosure or use of unmarked
information, and may use or disclose
such information for any purpose.
If your response contains confidential,
proprietary, or privileged information,
you must include a cover sheet marked
as follows identifying the specific pages
containing confidential, proprietary, or
privileged information:
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Notice of Restriction on Disclosure and Use
of Data: Pages [list applicable pages] of this
response may contain confidential,
proprietary, or privileged information that is
exempt from public disclosure. Such
information shall be used or disclosed only
for the purposes described in this RFI: DE–
FOA–0001024. The Government may use or
disclose any information that is not
appropriately marked or otherwise restricted,
regardless of source.
In addition, (1) the header and footer
of every page that contains confidential,
proprietary, or privileged information
must be marked as follows: ‘‘Contains
Confidential, Proprietary, or Privileged
Information Exempt from Public
Disclosure’’ and (2) every line and
paragraph containing proprietary,
privileged, or trade secret information
must be clearly marked with double
brackets or highlighting.
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V. Evaluation and Administration by
Federal and Non-Federal Personnel
Federal employees are subject to the
non-disclosure requirements of a
criminal statute, the Trade Secrets Act,
18 U.S.C. 1905. The Government may
seek the advice of qualified non-Federal
personnel. The Government may also
use non-Federal personnel to conduct
routine, nondiscretionary administrative
activities. The respondents, by
submitting their response, consent to
DOE providing their response to nonFederal parties. Non-Federal parties
given access to responses must be
subject to an appropriate obligation of
confidentiality prior to being given the
access. Submissions may be reviewed
by support contractors and private
consultants.
VI. Request for Information Categories
and Questions
DOE requests that manufacturers,
utilities, research organizations, state
and municipal energy programs, and
other stakeholders submit their
comments and additional information
on the Prioritization Tool’s inputs and
outputs for measures as attachments to
an email. It is recommended that
attachments with file sizes exceeding
25MB be compressed (i.e., zipped) to
ensure message delivery. Only
electronic responses will be accepted.
Respondents may answer as many or as
few questions as they wish. EERE will
not respond to individual submissions
or publish publicly a compendium of
responses. A response to this RFI will
not be viewed as a binding commitment
to develop or pursue the project or ideas
discussed, nor does it provide an
advantage to future Funding
Opportunity Announcements.
Respondents are requested to provide
the following information in their
response to this RFI:
• Company/institution name;
• Company/institution contact;
• Contact’s address, phone number,
and email address.
DOE invites comments and
information from respondents on all of
the input and output data that are
provided in the spreadsheet (https://
eere-exchange.energy.gov/
Default.aspx?Search=prioritization
%20tool&SearchType=#FoaIdc83baeea4a16-48fa-a123-7c03796b503b), as well
as any of the elements previously
discussed or additional issues the
respondent deems important. Use the
following email address:
BTO_P_Tool_RFI@go.doe.gov.
Additional high-quality data sources
and references are needed to evaluate
any other possible initiatives to expand
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the portfolio and help identify the most
promising cost-effective energy
reduction measures for buildings.
Specifically, DOE is requesting
comment and information on the
following topics:
A. Category 1: Information on BTO
Prioritization Tool’s Inputs
Please provide your comments on the
accuracy of the inputs of the
Prioritization Tool, listed in the input
tab for each energy end-use field in the
spreadsheet (https://eereexchange.energy.gov/
Default.aspx?Search=prioritization%20
tool&SearchType=#FoaIdc83baeea4a16-48fa-a123-7c03796b503b). These
inputs include the measure’s
description, targeted market sector,
technology typical life expectancy,
energy consumption and installed cost
for both baseline and efficient measures,
and/or percentage energy savings and
cost premium of an efficient measure
compared to the baseline measure.
B. Category 2: Additional Information
on BTO Prioritization Tool’s Inputs
Please provide additional up-to-date,
peer-reviewed and published
information, studies, and reports on any
of the inputs of the evaluated energy
efficiency measures.
C. Category 3: BTO Prioritization Tool’s
Generated Outputs
Please provide your comments on the
perceived accuracy of the tool’s
generated outputs listed in the
spreadsheet, whether as a whole for the
entire portfolio of measures or in part
for each measure. Specifically, these
outputs include: Technical Potential;
Unstaged Maximum Adoption Potential,
unstaged CCE; Staged Maximum
Adoption Potential, and staged CCE.
D. Category 4: Information on Absent
Buildings-Related Energy Efficiency
Measures That May Enhance the Tool or
Measures That Are Listed But Were
Excluded From Analysis
Please provide any up-to-date, peerreviewed and published information,
studies and reports on buildings-related
energy efficiency measures missing from
the tool or measures that are listed but
were excluded from analysis due to a
lack of reliable peer-reviewed,
published data. While only a couple
hundred measures are included in the
final analysis, hundreds of others are
available for analysis and can be viewed
in the tab called ‘‘Excluded Measures’’
in the spreadsheet referenced above. For
each measure, DOE is specifically
interested in information on measure
description, its incremental cost and
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energy savings over its baseline
technology, life expectancy, and a
description of the market to which the
measure can be applied.
E. Category 5: Benefits or Risks of Using
the BTO Prioritization Tool
What are potential or perceived
benefits or risks of using the BTO
Prioritization Tool to inform decisionmaking within BTO?
F. Category 6: Public Access to the BTO
Prioritization Tool
What is the perceived value in the
BTO Prioritization Tool models and
analysis, and interest in having public
access to the BTO Prioritization Tool? If
the BTO Prioritization Tool is to be
made publically available, what format
is preferred (e.g., real-time online
execution, downloadable Excel file,
downloadable non-Excel file, etc.)? An
example of a similar publically available
software tool is the System Advisor
Model for renewable energy systems
(https://sam.nrel.gov/).
Issued in Washington, DC, on November
13, 2013.
Roland J. Risser,
Director, Building Technologies Office,
Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy.
[FR Doc. 2013–27941 Filed 11–20–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
[Docket No. IC14–3–000]
Commission Information Collection
Activities (Ferc–Ferc–549d); Comment
Request; Extension
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission, DOE.
ACTION: Notice of information collection
and request for comments.
AGENCY:
In compliance with the
requirements of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995, 44 U.S.C.
3506(c)(2)(A), the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission (Commission or
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
SUMMARY:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:17 Nov 20, 2013
Jkt 232001
FERC) is soliciting public comment on
the currently approved information
collection, FERC–549D (Quarterly
Transportation and Storage Report for
Intrastate Natural Gas and Hinshaw
Pipelines).
Comments on the collection of
information are due January 21, 2014.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
(identified by Docket No. IC14–3–000)
by either of the following methods:
• eFiling at Commission’s Web site:
https://www.ferc.gov/docs-filing/
efiling.asp.
• Mail/Hand Delivery/Courier:
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission,
Secretary of the Commission, 888 First
Street NE., Washington, DC 20426.
Instructions: All submissions must be
formatted and filed in accordance with
submission guidelines at: https://
www.ferc.gov/help/submissionguide.asp. For user assistance contact
FERC Online Support by email at
ferconlinesupport@ferc.gov, or by phone
at: (866) 208–3676 (toll-free), or (202)
502–8659 for TTY.
Docket: Users interested in receiving
automatic notification of activity in this
docket or in viewing/downloading
comments and issuances in this docket
may do so at https://www.ferc.gov/docsfiling/docs-filing.asp.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Ellen Brown may be reached by email
at DataClearance@FERC.gov, telephone
at (202) 502–8663, and fax at (202) 273–
0873.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Title: Quarterly Transportation and
Storage Report for Intrastate Natural Gas
and Hinshaw Pipelines.
OMB Control No.: 1902–0253
Type of Request: Three-year extension
of the FERC–549D information
collection requirements with no changes
to the current reporting requirements.
Abstract: The reporting requirements
under FERC–549D are required to carry
out the Commission’s policies in
accordance with the general authority in
Sections 1(c) of the Natural Gas Act
(NGA) 1 and Sections 311 of the Natural
DATES:
1 15
PO 00000
U.S.C. 717–817–w.
Frm 00030
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
69843
Gas Policy Act of 1978 (NGPA).2 This
collection promotes transparency by
collecting and making available
intrastate and Hinshaw pipeline
transactional information. The
Commission collects the data upon a
standardized form with all requirements
outlined in 18 CFR 284.126.
The FERC Form 549D collects the
following information:
• Full legal name and identification
number of the shipper receiving service;
• Type of service performed for each
transaction;
• The rate charged under each
transaction;
• The primary receipt and delivery
points for the transaction, specifying the
rate schedule/name of service and
docket were approved;
• The quantity of natural gas the
shipper is entitled to transport, store,
and deliver for each transaction;
• The term of the transaction,
specifying the beginning and ending
month and year of current agreement;
• Total volumes transported, stored,
injected or withdrawn for the shipper;
and
• Annual revenues received for each
shipper, excluding revenues from
storage services.
Filers submit the Form-549D on a
quarterly basis.
Access to the FERC–549D Information
Collection Materials: A copy of the
current form and related materials can
be found at https://www.ferc.gov/docsfiling/forms.asp#549d, but will not be
included in the Federal Register. The
Commission will not publish these
materials in the Federal Register.
Type of Respondents: Intrastate
natural gas and Hinshaw pipelines.
Estimate of Annual Burden: 3 The
Commission estimates the total Public
Reporting Burden for this information
collection as:
2 15
U.S.C. 3301–3432.
Commission defines burden as the total
time, effort, or financial resources expended by
persons to generate, maintain, retain, or disclose or
provide information to or for a Federal agency. For
further explanation of what is included in the
information collection burden, reference 5 Code of
Federal Regulations 1320.3.
3 The
E:\FR\FM\21NON1.SGM
21NON1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 78, Number 225 (Thursday, November 21, 2013)]
[Notices]
[Pages 69839-69843]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2013-27941]
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DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Building Technologies Office Prioritization Tool
AGENCY: Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, Department of
Energy.
ACTION: Request for information (RFI).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Building Technologies
Office (BTO) developed the Prioritization Tool to improve its
programmatic decision-making. The tool provides an objective framework
for most energy-saving measures and scenarios, as well as methodology,
comparing long-term benefits and end-user costs applied to various
markets, end-uses, and lifetimes. Currently, BTO seeks comments and
information related to the Prioritization Tool that improves the tool's
accuracy and applicability for technology planning within BTO.
Specifically, this notice solicits comments and information on data,
assumptions and outputs of various energy efficiency technologies and
[[Page 69840]]
activities analyzed by the Prioritization Tool.
DATES: Responses to this RFI must be submitted electronically to BTO_P_Tool_RFI@go.doe.gov no later than 5:00 p.m. (EST) on December 24,
2013.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. Patrick Phelan, U.S. Department of
Energy, Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, Building
Technologies Office, EE 2J, 1000 Independence Avenue SW., Washington,
DC 20585-0121. Telephone: (202) 287-1906. Email:
patrick.phelan@ee.doe.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Background
A. Program Overview
B. Prioritization Tool Description
C. Methodology
D. Inputs and Outputs
II. Purpose
III. Disclaimer and Important Notes
IV. Proprietary Information
V. Evaluation and Administration by Federal and Non-Federal
Personnel
VI. Request for Information Categories and Questions
A. Category 1
B. Category 2
C. Category 3
D. Category 4
E. Category 5
F. Category 6
I. Background
A. Program Overview
The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Building Technologies Office
(BTO) focuses on three key areas in order to develop innovative and
cost-effective energy saving solutions:
Supporting research and development of high impact building
technologies
Accelerating market penetration of technologies that will save
the country energy by assisting to overcome key market barriers
Organizing and facilitating enforcement of minimum efficiency
standards and building codes to ensure energy savings within buildings.
BTO has developed a new technology prioritization framework to provide
analytical support for its programmatic decision-making in order to
further accelerate the transformation of the U.S. building energy
efficiency sector.
B. Prioritization Tool Description
The tool was designed to inform programmatic decision-making and
facilitate the setting of programmatic goals. It also allows the
evaluation of ``what if'' scenarios when pursuing potential competing
energy efficiency measures, and it ultimately helps the BTO to create
Funding Opportunity Announcements (FOAs) objectives. Currently, the
tool contains data on over 500 energy efficiency measures along with
their markets. It has the capability to perform extensive analyses
using established methodology for calculating energy savings potential
and the costs of conserved energy associated with each measure.
The Prioritization Tool enables open and objective comparison of
hundreds of technology and market-based investment opportunities
available to BTO. The energy efficiency measures identified in the tool
cover a spectrum of market opportunities, including residential and
commercial buildings, new and existing buildings, as well as industrial
and outdoor applications. Most of the measures considered fall within
one of BTO's main focus areas in building energy end-use sectors:
Heating, ventilation and air-conditioning (HVAC)
Water heating
Appliances
Lighting
Windows
Envelope: insulation and roofing
Sensors and controls
Miscellaneous electric loads
The tool strives to be comprehensive by including most known energy
efficiency measures proven to save energy; laboratory-demonstrated,
field-tested, analytically derived (with peer review) savings, and
inclusive by integrating inputs from hundreds of sources and expert
reviews.
While BTO has identified over five hundred energy efficiency
measures, it chose to narrow the scope of analysis to focus on the most
promising measures that have the greatest potential for energy savings
across the United States. By excluding measures based on the following
predefined criteria, BTO has created a portfolio consisting of 261
measures which, by using the Prioritization Tool, were subsequently
subjected to a more extensive quantitative analysis to assure only the
highest impact measures are the focus of further effort. The approach
was first for BTO to focus on technologies which had the highest data
quality (i.e., where peer-reviewed energy efficiency and cost data are
available in published reports or from technology experts).
Then, measures were excluded from further analysis if they:
Offered low energy savings potential (less than 100 TBtu
in the year 2030);
Involved fuel switching (unless the analysis team deemed a
technology as important to assess);
Had one or more significant market barriers;
Were deemed impractical by the analysis team;
Were already included in the Annual Energy Outlook (AEO)
2010 baseline, which takes into account known technologies,
technological and demographic trends, and current laws and regulations.
These criteria were considered as general guidelines; exceptions
for certain promising or cost effective measures were made on a case-
by-case basis based on expert analysis. Finally, BTO analyzed and
prioritized, both individually and in the context of the full portfolio
of measures, all 261 measures having relatively high energy savings
potential and significant ability to compete in the market place.
C. Methodology
The BTO Prioritization Tool uses established methodologies to
evaluate under a variety of scenarios the incremental lifetime costs of
a measure's energy savings potential. The tool calculates potential
savings at the national or regional level and compares the results to a
business-as-usual baseline defined in the U.S. Energy Information
Administration's (EIA) Annual Energy Outlook 2010 (AEO).\1\ The
following scenarios are used for the prioritization analysis and
represent potential annual energy savings associated for each measure:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ https://www.eia.gov/oiaf/aeo/pdf/0383(2010).pdf. The AEO
provides annual projections through the year 2035 of national
equipment stock and energy consumption based on end-use, type of
fuel, geographic region, and type of building or home.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Technical Potential is the annual energy savings achieved
by instant replacement of all technically suitable existing stock in
2010 and beyond with the proposed measure, regardless of cost. Although
the technical potential cannot be realized, it provides an upper bound
to the maximum energy savings that can be achieved by the proposed
measure assuming instant and complete market adoption of the
technology.
Maximum Adoption Potential is the total annual savings
based on deployment of the evaluated measure given 100% market
penetration for all end-of-life or accelerated replacements and new
purchases or new construction installations. The entire existing stock
is replaced at an accelerated schedule for cases when a retrofit
opportunity is cost effective, which means the present value of the
energy savings of other efficiency measures exceeds the full, installed
cost of the evaluated efficiency measure. Therefore, it becomes
[[Page 69841]]
economically rational to replace all of the currently deployed stock
immediately with the efficiency measure. This scenario corresponds to
the least expensive means to deploy a given efficiency measure into the
marketplace. This potential is also referred to as Unstaged Maximum
Adoption Potential.
Staged Maximum Adoption Potential adjusts the savings of
the Maximum Adoption Potential to avoid double-counting energy savings
for measures with overlapping markets within a given portfolio. For
example, the installation of compact fluorescent light bulbs would
reduce the potential energy savings from light-emitting diodes (LEDs).
The savings of the lowest-cost measures are accounted for first.
Adoption-Based Potential uses the Bass diffusion model2
\2\ to represent a more realistic potential impact on energy savings in
the marketplace. This scenario allows simulation of the DOE programs'
impact on measure diffusion and assumes that research and development
and deployment activities would accelerate market introduction. It also
allows for evaluation of standards by replacing all purchased stock
with the technology being evaluated once a standard is set in place.
For this RFI, outputs from this scenario are not available but will be
addressed in future publications.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Bass, F.M., 1969, ``A New Product Growth Model for Consumer
Durables,'' Management Science, Vol. 15, pp. 215-227.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For the unstaged and staged Maximum Adoption Potential scenarios,
the tool also calculates the levelized cost of conserved energy (CCE),
which is an annualized value of discounted costs and benefits of each
measure. More specifically, the CCE allows comparison of end-user costs
per unit of conserved energy for each measure. The end-user cost refers
to the difference in capital, operations, and maintenance costs between
the measure being analyzed and a typical baseline, adjusted for
potential cost differences resulting from the variation in lifetimes
between the proposed measure and the baseline. CCE is used during
staging analysis, which involves adjusting the energy savings of each
measure by taking into account competition for savings within the same
or overlapping markets, and allocating savings within specific markets
to measures with the lowest unstaged CCE first. Consequently, the
staged CCE is calculated based on adjusted staged savings. Hence the
staged CCE is defined as the annualized value of discounted cost per
unit of conserved energy after staging of energy savings for each
measure. Results are presented for both unstaged and staged scenarios
by graphing unstaged or staged CCE versus unstaged or staged Maximum
Adoption Potential savings, respectively.
For further overview, discussion and examples of how the
Prioritization Tool analyses are conducted, please view the video
presentation at https://media.navigant.com/videotest/EN_DOEWebex_VID_0913.html. For more detailed description and discussion of the
methodologies underlying the BTO Prioritization Tool's analytical
capabilities, as well as its outputs, caveats, and functions, refer to
the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) Technical Report: NREL/
TP-6A20-54799, available at https://www.nrel.gov/docs/fy12osti/54799.pdf.
D. Inputs and Outputs
DOE seeks comments and information on measure inputs and
assumptions used by the BTO Prioritization Tool as well as the outputs
generated by the tool. The details of the inputs and outputs for the
defined portfolio of 261 measures are provided in the spreadsheet,
available at https://eere-exchange.energy.gov/Default.aspx?Search=prioritization%20tool&SearchType=#FoaIdc83baeea-4a16-48fa-a123-7c03796b503b and titled: RFI attachments--v11. The
spreadsheet is divided into eight energy end-uses: Heating, ventilation
and air-conditioning (HVAC), water heating, envelope, windows,
appliances, sensors and controls, lighting, and miscellaneous electric
loads (MELs). Information on each end-use is presented in two tabs: An
input tab that contains relevant input information on each measure and
an output tab that contains the analytical results for the year 2030.
The inputs include data, calculations and assumptions based on the
sources listed for each energy efficiency measure. More specifically,
the inputs include a description of each measure, targeted market
sector, typical technology life expectancy, energy consumption, and
installed costs for both the baseline and high-efficiency measures. It
also includes the percentage energy savings and cost premium of an
efficient measure compared to the baseline measure. DOE also seeks
comments and information with regard to the tool's outputs, which
include estimated Technical Potential energy savings, Unstaged Maximum
Adoption Potential savings, unstaged cost of conserved energy (CCE),
Staged Maximum Adoption Potential savings, and staged CCE for each
measure in the year 2030. Each column of the spreadsheet referenced
above contains specific input or output data, and is annotated with a
comment box that further explains the data in that column. For further
information on the Prioritization Tool's individual measure inputs,
refer to its notes and references columns. For further information on
the tool's outputs, refer to NREL TP 6A20-54799 and the BTO video
presentation, which can be found at links referenced above.
II. Purpose
The purpose of this RFI is to solicit comments and information from
industry, academia, research laboratories, government agencies, and
other stakeholders on input and output data for all measures evaluated
in the tool. DOE seeks data on new measures that may be missing from
the tool or measures that have not been evaluated but have potential
for significant national energy savings. This is solely a request for
information and not a Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA). EERE is
not accepting applications for funding related to this RFI at this
time.
III. Disclaimer and Important Notes
This RFI is not a Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA);
therefore, EERE is not accepting applications at this time. EERE may
issue a FOA in the future based on or related to the content and
responses to this RFI; however, EERE may also elect not to issue a FOA.
There is no guarantee that a FOA will be issued as a result of this
RFI. Responding to this RFI does not provide any advantage or
disadvantage to potential applicants if EERE chooses to issue a FOA
regarding the subject matter. Final details, including the anticipated
award size, quantity, and timing of EERE funded awards, will be subject
to Congressional appropriations and direction.
Any information obtained as a result of this RFI is intended to be
used by the Government on a non-attribution basis for planning and
strategy development; this RFI does not constitute a formal
solicitation for proposals or abstracts. Your response to this notice
will be treated as information only. EERE will review and consider all
responses in its formulation of program strategies for the identified
materials of interest that are the subject of this request. In
accordance with the Federal Acquisition Regulations, 48 CFR 15.201(e),
responses to this notice are not offers and cannot be accepted by the
Government to form a binding contract. EERE will not provide
reimbursement
[[Page 69842]]
for costs incurred in responding to this RFI. Respondents are advised
that DOE is under no obligation to acknowledge receipt of the
information received or provide feedback to respondents with respect to
any information submitted under this RFI. Responses to this RFI do not
bind EERE to any further actions related to this topic.
IV. Proprietary Information
Because information received in response to this RFI may be used to
structure future programs and FOAs and/or otherwise be made available
to the public, respondents are strongly advised to NOT include any
information in their responses that might be considered business
sensitive, proprietary, or otherwise confidential. If, however, a
respondent chooses to submit business sensitive, proprietary, or
otherwise confidential information, it must be clearly and
conspicuously marked as such in the response.
Responses containing confidential, proprietary, or privileged
information must be conspicuously marked as described below. Failure to
comply with these marking requirements may result in the disclosure of
the unmarked information under the Freedom of Information Act or
otherwise. The U.S. Federal Government is not liable for the disclosure
or use of unmarked information, and may use or disclose such
information for any purpose.
If your response contains confidential, proprietary, or privileged
information, you must include a cover sheet marked as follows
identifying the specific pages containing confidential, proprietary, or
privileged information:
Notice of Restriction on Disclosure and Use of Data: Pages [list
applicable pages] of this response may contain confidential,
proprietary, or privileged information that is exempt from public
disclosure. Such information shall be used or disclosed only for the
purposes described in this RFI: DE-FOA-0001024. The Government may
use or disclose any information that is not appropriately marked or
otherwise restricted, regardless of source.
In addition, (1) the header and footer of every page that contains
confidential, proprietary, or privileged information must be marked as
follows: ``Contains Confidential, Proprietary, or Privileged
Information Exempt from Public Disclosure'' and (2) every line and
paragraph containing proprietary, privileged, or trade secret
information must be clearly marked with double brackets or
highlighting.
V. Evaluation and Administration by Federal and Non-Federal Personnel
Federal employees are subject to the non-disclosure requirements of
a criminal statute, the Trade Secrets Act, 18 U.S.C. 1905. The
Government may seek the advice of qualified non-Federal personnel. The
Government may also use non-Federal personnel to conduct routine,
nondiscretionary administrative activities. The respondents, by
submitting their response, consent to DOE providing their response to
non-Federal parties. Non-Federal parties given access to responses must
be subject to an appropriate obligation of confidentiality prior to
being given the access. Submissions may be reviewed by support
contractors and private consultants.
VI. Request for Information Categories and Questions
DOE requests that manufacturers, utilities, research organizations,
state and municipal energy programs, and other stakeholders submit
their comments and additional information on the Prioritization Tool's
inputs and outputs for measures as attachments to an email. It is
recommended that attachments with file sizes exceeding 25MB be
compressed (i.e., zipped) to ensure message delivery. Only electronic
responses will be accepted. Respondents may answer as many or as few
questions as they wish. EERE will not respond to individual submissions
or publish publicly a compendium of responses. A response to this RFI
will not be viewed as a binding commitment to develop or pursue the
project or ideas discussed, nor does it provide an advantage to future
Funding Opportunity Announcements. Respondents are requested to provide
the following information in their response to this RFI:
Company/institution name;
Company/institution contact;
Contact's address, phone number, and email address.
DOE invites comments and information from respondents on all of the
input and output data that are provided in the spreadsheet (https://eere-exchange.energy.gov/Default.aspx?Search=prioritization%20tool&SearchType=#FoaIdc83baeea-4a16-48fa-a123-7c03796b503b), as well as any of the elements previously
discussed or additional issues the respondent deems important. Use the
following email address: BTO_P_Tool_RFI@go.doe.gov. Additional high-
quality data sources and references are needed to evaluate any other
possible initiatives to expand the portfolio and help identify the most
promising cost-effective energy reduction measures for buildings.
Specifically, DOE is requesting comment and information on the
following topics:
A. Category 1: Information on BTO Prioritization Tool's Inputs
Please provide your comments on the accuracy of the inputs of the
Prioritization Tool, listed in the input tab for each energy end-use
field in the spreadsheet (https://eere-exchange.energy.gov/Default.aspx?Search=prioritization%20tool&SearchType=#FoaIdc83baeea-4a16-48fa-a123-7c03796b503b). These inputs include the measure's
description, targeted market sector, technology typical life
expectancy, energy consumption and installed cost for both baseline and
efficient measures, and/or percentage energy savings and cost premium
of an efficient measure compared to the baseline measure.
B. Category 2: Additional Information on BTO Prioritization Tool's
Inputs
Please provide additional up-to-date, peer-reviewed and published
information, studies, and reports on any of the inputs of the evaluated
energy efficiency measures.
C. Category 3: BTO Prioritization Tool's Generated Outputs
Please provide your comments on the perceived accuracy of the
tool's generated outputs listed in the spreadsheet, whether as a whole
for the entire portfolio of measures or in part for each measure.
Specifically, these outputs include: Technical Potential; Unstaged
Maximum Adoption Potential, unstaged CCE; Staged Maximum Adoption
Potential, and staged CCE.
D. Category 4: Information on Absent Buildings-Related Energy
Efficiency Measures That May Enhance the Tool or Measures That Are
Listed But Were Excluded From Analysis
Please provide any up-to-date, peer-reviewed and published
information, studies and reports on buildings-related energy efficiency
measures missing from the tool or measures that are listed but were
excluded from analysis due to a lack of reliable peer-reviewed,
published data. While only a couple hundred measures are included in
the final analysis, hundreds of others are available for analysis and
can be viewed in the tab called ``Excluded Measures'' in the
spreadsheet referenced above. For each measure, DOE is specifically
interested in information on measure description, its incremental cost
and
[[Page 69843]]
energy savings over its baseline technology, life expectancy, and a
description of the market to which the measure can be applied.
E. Category 5: Benefits or Risks of Using the BTO Prioritization Tool
What are potential or perceived benefits or risks of using the BTO
Prioritization Tool to inform decision-making within BTO?
F. Category 6: Public Access to the BTO Prioritization Tool
What is the perceived value in the BTO Prioritization Tool models
and analysis, and interest in having public access to the BTO
Prioritization Tool? If the BTO Prioritization Tool is to be made
publically available, what format is preferred (e.g., real-time online
execution, downloadable Excel file, downloadable non-Excel file, etc.)?
An example of a similar publically available software tool is the
System Advisor Model for renewable energy systems (https://sam.nrel.gov/).
Issued in Washington, DC, on November 13, 2013.
Roland J. Risser,
Director, Building Technologies Office, Energy Efficiency and Renewable
Energy.
[FR Doc. 2013-27941 Filed 11-20-13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450-01-P