Corporate energy management potential remains largely untapped

Study finds that, despite large potential for savings, only a small percentage of the market is taking advantage energy management systems' automation and controls.

By David Greenfield March 9, 2010

More energy management information fromControl Engineering

Automation and control capabilities enabled by energy management systems (EMS) are most frequently focused on facilities heating, cooling, ventilation, and lighting, which together account forapproximately 57% of energy consumed in commercial buildings, according to theU.S. Department of Energy. However, a recent Pike Research report finds thatdespite the strong return on investment for EMSdeployments, just 14% of the market potential is being realized.

"With an increasing number of buildings 20years and older that need to become more energy efficient, the addressable market for EMS will continue to grow,"says Pike Research managing director Clint Wheelock. "The EMS penetration gap is largely driven by the fact that vendors are just now beginning to fully apply information technology to the energy management challenge."

Pike Research forecasts that annual EMS revenues inthe U.S.will reach $6.8 billion by 2020. During that period, EMS will become more tightly integrated with legacy building management systems aswell as enterprise IT and networking infrastructure.

An executive summary of the Pike Research study,"Energy Management Systems for Commercial Buildings," is available for free download by clicking here.

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  • GE Fanuc and EnteGreat collaborate on industrialenergymanagementproduct
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-Edited byDavidGreenfield, editorial director
Control Engineering Sustainable Engineering News Desk