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ESG & decarbonization in operations: the digital gap

This article was previously published in the December 2022 issue of APUEA magazine.

 

ESG (Environmental, Social, and Governance) is a framework that helps stakeholders understand how a company is managing risks and opportunities related to environmental, social, and governance criteria. Looking at ESG from a plant management’s perspective: Environmental includes energy, water and waste. Social covers safety, first and foremost. Governance consists in complying with regulations and best practices, as well as communicating with stakeholders.

 

Digital technology suppliers have rushed into the ESG trend. Thanks to the relatively low barrier to entry, many IoT-turned-Digital Twin players have now become ESG specialists and updated their brochure accordingly. Challenges, limitations, disillusions are already visible.

 

However, more than a fad or a feel-good exercise, ESG can have a lasting positive impact on the enterprise and its stakeholders. More than a business opportunity or a gimmick, digital technologies can help in the implementation of ESG.

 

From monitoring to improving ESG

 

Let us explore typical real-life situations:

 

The facility manager at a leading automotive OEM in East China was disappointed when he realized the ESG platform deployed by their group was simply capturing energy consumption meters value and applying a formula to calculate CO2 equivalent. Now that the easiest has been done, he is looking for a solution to track improvement actions, enforce good operation & maintenance habits, both for in-house workers and facility management contractors.

 

An Italian manufacturer experienced repeated fires, luckily with only minor damages. After mandatory reporting to the local government, investigations were carried out, resulting in corrective actions. During a follow-up visit, the auditors found that many actions had not been completed, despite paper documentation saying they were. After receiving a warning, the company realized such critical activities were not managed by its corporate IT system.

 

The industrial director of a European construction material producer in Asia decided not to pursue the implementation of a so-called Digital Twin for energy management. Instead, he built the same functionality with existing sensors, PLC and Business Intelligence tools. The downside was that his company did not benefit from the positive ESG-themed coverage usually associated with signing with this supplier, very active on social media.

 

In the first two examples, the digital solutions did not provide useful support in managing risk. In the third example, the client concluded that for such limited usefulness, they could build their own system in-house.

 

From ESG to carbon footprint to energy optimization and maintenance

 

ESG often focuses on direct and indirect greenhouse gas emissions, considered a good proxy for environmental compliance. The carbon footprint methodology is used to estimate the greenhouse gases emissions, and to suggest actions to reduce these emissions. It looks at various greenhouse gases, measured in CO2 equivalent. The ISO 14064-1:2018 standard, part of the ISO 14000 environmental series, specifies principles and requirements for the quantification and reporting of greenhouse gas emissions and removals. Carbon footprint scope 1 and 2 refer to emissions from the plant facilities and the energy consumed (excluding the supply chain).

 

Contributing activities in the plant include the use, maintenance, repair, replacement, refurbishment of facilities and equipment, as well as operational energy and water usage. Energy consumption is the single biggest contributor and most CO2 emissions can be computed with a simple formula: energy consumption (kWh) x energy carbon content (kgCO2eq/kWh). The carbon content depends on the electricity mix, which leads companies to make contractual arrangements with utilities and to develop their own renewable energy capacity such as rooftop PV power plants. Energy consumption can be optimized through systematic analysis, improvement, and monitoring.

 

 

This energy optimization exercise results in a technical action plan that may include plant modifications, new operation and maintenance routines. Maintenance has a major influence on carbon emissions, first thanks to its impact on energy consumption, second in terms of the embodied carbon in the components and consumables used. Onsite energy facilities, such as the PV plant, and monitoring equipment, such as sensors, themselves require complex maintenance to operate as designed.

 

HVAC is typically the largest system in terms of energy consumption and carbon emissions, often contributing over 50% of emissions. The energy efficiency improvement plan may include building modifications (for example insulation), right sizing the HVAC equipment, setup of sensors for continuous monitoring, and O&M activities such as setting different temperature setpoints, repairing damaged equipment, identifying and fixing leaks, inspections etc. Lubrication and filter cleaning, as untrendy and unsophisticated these activities may appear, are two major contributors to energy inefficiencies: double digit energy savings from adequate routines are not unheard of.

 

This article continues with our Customer Story – ESG in Smart O&M: Implementing the action plan and demonstrating compliance.

 


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