June 2013 |
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OpenADR Helps Building Owners and Operators Meet Title 24 California Compliance Requirements For Connecting Buildings to the Smart Grid
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Open Automated
Demand Response 2.0a is the only standard supporting AutoDR
requirements for residential, commercial and industrial customers in
California and Beyond
MORGAN HILL, Calif., June 25, 2013: The OpenADR Alliance today
announced that the Open Automated Demand Response (OpenADR) Smart Grid
standard enables compliance with the new Title 24 California Energy
Code, in effect Jan. 1, 2014. Since OpenADR is being designed into most
building management and lighting control systems, California business
owners and operators can more easily comply with the changes to Title
24, originally adopted in 1978 to regulate California’s energy crisis
by requiring any construction of a new building, or alterations made to
an existing building, to meet certain standards. The new code includes
more stringent regulations for demand response (DR) capabilities within
lighting and HVAC (heating, ventilation, and air conditioning) in both
residential and non-residential buildings, enabling better management
of peak energy demand, costs and overall energy usage.
The revised Title 24 code states that demand responsive controls and
equipment shall be capable of receiving and automatically responding to
at least one standards-based messaging protocol such as OpenADR. For
example, in response to a DR signal, buildings larger than 10,000
square feet will have to automatically reduce their lighting power by
at least 15 percent below the building’s maximum lighting power.
The signal can come directly from a local utility, independent system
operator (ISO), curtailment service provider, or aggregator, indicating
a price or a request to modify electricity consumption, for a limited
time period. All three major California utilities have announced
support for OpenADR 2.0, the only standard that supports the AutoDR
needs for residential, commercial and industrial customers.
“Complying with Title 24 will be easy for building owners and operators
because the OpenADR standard is already being designed directly into
building management and lighting control systems,”said Barry Haaser,
managing director, OpenADR Alliance. “Systems with OpenADR-compliant
interfaces will be able to participate in AutoDR programs offered by
utilities in California to better manage peak energy demand, reducing
costs and overall energy usage.”
While demand response is not required in HVAC systems under the new
code, it is one option for the required standards-based messaging
protocol that is required. “If building owners are going to go through
the effort of connecting their lighting into an automated DR system, it
only makes sense for them to connect their HVAC systems as well,”
Haaser added.
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More on OpenADR
OpenADR 2.0a, released in August 2012, supports the simplest devices
installed in commercial, industrial and residential environments to
enable broad-based and completely automated participation in DR
events. OpenADR 2.0b is designed for more sophisticated devices
and will support most DR services and markets, and includes a flexible
reporting capability for past, current and future data reports.
The OpenADR 2.0b draft profile specification is available for download on the OpenADR Alliance website - http://www.openadr.org/specification.
About the OpenADR Alliance
The OpenADR Alliance fosters the development, adoption, and compliance
of the Open Automated Demand Response (OpenADR) standard through
collaboration, education, training, testing, and certification. The
OpenADR Alliance is open to all interested stakeholders interested in
accelerating the adoption of the OpenADR standard for price- and
reliability-based demand response. More information can be obtained at http://www.openadr.org/
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