ENERGY ANALYSIS OF A METRO TRANSIT SYSTEM FOR SUSTAINABILITY AND EFFICIENCY IMPROVEMENT
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Abstract
The industrial sector in the US accounted for 33% of the overall energy consumption and 23% of total GHG Emissions in 2022, necessitating the need for energy efficiency and decarbonization of this sector. This study identifies common opportunities and challenges while performing energy audits for the State of Maryland public transportation maintenance complex and proposes site-specific energy efficiency measures. Utilizing performance indices such as Energy Use Intensity (EUI) and load factor from end-use energy data, as well as walkthrough observations from energy audits, energy efficiency measures specific to each facility were formulated to augment the overall energy performance. Additionally, energy modeling helped pinpoint the additional scope of energy efficiency improvements that could have potential significant energy performance improvements and reduce on-site GHG emissions. Among the energy conservation measures considered, the re-sizing and decarbonization of HVAC equipment has the greatest contribution to energy and GHG savings, with a 100% decrease in natural gas, a 37% decrease in electricity use annually, and net decrease of 272 Mton CO2. This study aims to highlight the similarities and differences in existing transportation and maintenance facilities and the applicable technology(ies) that could streamline and serve as a guide for energy audits for transportation maintenance facilities by demonstrating the most common energy efficiency measures and subsequent achievable savings for these facilities.