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Gas Detection
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Installing and Integrating a Gas Monitoring
System in a Commercial Building:
Opportunities and Challenges
Agenda
Introduction
Challenges with Gas Monitoring Many Areas Require Monitoring Compliance Issues Cost Considerations
Opportunities Strategic System Design 3 Examples
LEED, Green Credits Communications Intelligence Bottom Line Boosters
Questions & Answers
Donald Olson Strategic Marketing Manager, Honeywell Analytics
Installing and Integrating Gas Monitors in
Commercial Buildings: Challenges and Opportunities
4 Diverse Lines of Business Across Many Vertical Markets
Industrial Fixed Commercial Fixed Portables High-Tech
Applications
Oil and gas Petrochemicals Special chemicals Water treatment Plastics and fibers Pulp and printing Agriculture Manufacturing
Parking structures Commercial buildings Indoor Air Quality Mechanical rooms Grocery stores Ice arenas Commercial kitchens Shopping centers Swimming pools Schools and laboratories
Underground utility and electricity ducts
Boiler rooms Post-fire sites Sewers Industrial plants Industrial hygiene First responder teams Remote fleets
Semiconductor manufacturing and
nanotechnology
Aerospace propulsion and safety
Specialty chemicals Research laboratories Emergency response
Variable Occupancy Rooms (e.g. Classrooms, Conference
Rooms, Call Centers)
Parking Garages and Other Vehicular Areas
Warehouses
Mechanical Rooms
Boilers/Chillers
Commercial Kitchens
Ambulance Bays
Warehouses
Classrooms/Call Centers
Storage/Chemical Rooms
Kitchens
Many Building Spaces to Monitor
ASHRAE
OSHA
EPA
LEED
Building Codes
Compliance Challenges for Commercial Buildings
Cost Snapshot of a Commercial Building
Energy Breakdowns by Systems
Source: U.S. Department of Energy
Systems
Impacted
by Gas
Monitoring
Cost Savings Opportunity #1: Parking Garage
Example Cost of continuous fan operation in parking garage
8 fans @ 3 hp = 24 hp
24 hp x .8 kw/hp = 19.2 kw
19.2 kw x $0.10/kwhr = $1.92/hr x 8760 hours/year
$16,819.20 annual electricity cost
Cost of gas monitoring w/DCV (25% fan runtime)
$16,819.20 x .25 = $4,204.75 annual electricity cost
$16,819.20 $4,204.75 = 12,614.14/year savings
Plus savings from less call for heat!
Plus savings from less fan wear and tear!
Cost Savings Opportunity #2: Mechanical Room
Example
Refrigerant gases cost about $10 to $15 per pound
A typical supermarket chain uses 400,000 pounds of refrigerant
Leak Rate is 5% annnually
Total Cost of refrigerant used: $12 x 400,000 = $4.8M
Total Cost of refrigerant leaked: $4.8M x .05 = $240,000
Plus EPA fines are now up to $37,500 per day for anyone
venting ozone-depleting gases
at a 37.5 percent leak rate
Cost Savings Opportunity #3: Indoor Air Quality using a CO2/VOC monitor with Temp/Humidity control and DCV
Challenge: School added enclosed parking garage to existing facility
Strategy: Gas detection system with single fan with variable speed
operation/DCV
Payoff: Projected $18,000 annual savings, plus reduced maintenance
and training costs
Frank Sinatra High School New York City, NY
Challenge: Facility needed to bring gas monitoring into a green
building design
Strategy: Wireless installation for aesthetics (no conduit), energy
savings, flexibility
Payoff: Over $10,000 in installation savings from reduced conduit and
labor; improved indoor air quality,
reduced operating costs, green
building merit
Mt. Boucherie Ice Arena Westbank, British Columbia
Opportunities: Demand-Control Ventilation
Analog Systems
with Direct Fan Activation
Opportunity: Designing the Optimal System Architecture
Network Systems
Interfaced with a BAS
Single-Gas Standalone E3Point Monitoring E3Point/BACnet (MS-TP) Configuration
Integrating the Architecture
Benefits Addressable points
Daisy chain vs. home runs
Power & data together
Remote triggers
More data to poll diagnostics, trends, history
ROI control solutions
Ease of retrofit
Gas Monitoring System
Harnessing the Power of Data
The Intelligent, Sustainable Building
Contacts
Commercial USA & Canada: 1-800-538-0363
Donald J. Olson Commercial Marketing Manager Americas 847.955.4081 don.olson@honeywell.com
Chuck Linn National Sales Manager USA 410.713.0450 chuck.linn@honeywell.com
Ed Burton National Sales Manager Canada 403.396.0341 ed.burton@honeywell.com
Richard Voyer Site Leader Canada 800.563.2967 richard.voyer@honeywell.com
Dave Chiet National Account Manager 847.274.9659 dave.chiet@honeywell.com
Paul Bava Technical Sales Specialist 416.427.7230 paul.bava@honeywell.com
Richard Brisebois Regional Sales Manager Service Montreal 514.212.8986 richard.brisebois@honeywell.com
Thomas John Regional Sales Manager Service Ontario 416.998.5711 thomas.john@honeywell.com
Canada
Paul Bouari Regional Sales Manager Eastern COM Ottawa, QC, NS, PE, NL, NB 514.235.0815 paul.bouari@honeywell.com
Peter Bogdanis Regional Sales Manager Central COM Ontario (less Ottawa), SK, MB 416.569.2796 peter.bogdanis@honeywell.com
Morgan Burke Regional Sales Manager Western COM AB, BC 403.607.0762 morgan.burke@honeywell.com
Inside Sales - Canada 800.563.2967 Fax - 450.619.2448 hasales.canada@honeywell.com
USA
Greg Kaufman Regional Sales Manager COM Northeast Region 860.543.1907 greg.kaufman@honeywell.com
Ted Roman Regional Sales Manager COM MidAtlantic 724.759.3562 ted.roman@honeywell.com
Andy Smith Regional Sales Manager COM Midwest Region 952.491.1903 andy.m.smith@honeywell.com
William Sudah Regional Sales Manager COM Southeast Region 786.299.2173 william.sudah@honeywell.com
Hamid Yazdchi Regional Sales Manager COM West Region 818.462.1532 hamid.yazdchi@honeywell.com
Inside Sales - USA 888.955.2585 Fax - 847.955.8210 hasales.us@honeywell.com
Thank You!
Any questions?
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