Electrical Power Meters
On-site power metering, strategically implemented, serves to improve the management of energy throughout the facility. Metering individual switchboards that serve air-conditioning (HVAC), distribution switchboards, light and power, lighting only, and so forth provides clarity into the effectiveness of the energy conservation strategies which have been put in place.
Power meters can be installed to monitor specific items of equipment or specific rooms, such as security or data / server rooms. These rooms might be within a tenant lease or part of base building obligations. Understanding the energy use of both situations is conducive to power and resource management that is, reducing costs.
Fluid Energy Meters
The energy carried by the fluid can be logged via such meters called Fluid Energy Meters, the use an onboard high-level interface for the calculation an integer for the value of energy consumed based upon volume of water, and the temperature difference between entering and leaving a zone.
Often used in common main air-conditioning plant applications, such as a common chilled water system, condenser water system, and heating hot water systems.
The facility may have multiple users of the same water system. All users are connected to the system which is common to chillers, cooling towers or boilers, and to treat these tenants with fairness and actual energy they use is considered as per the value derived from the fluid energy meter.
This value is more likely the truth as opposed to some calculation derived upon square meters of floor space, or a number of people / bedrooms or even windows.
Fossil Fuel Metering
Natural gas, coal, oil diesel (for generators) and many others may be used on your site, by measuring it’s consumption accurately you may benefits your rating, and just as importantly you’ll be able to see where the resources are being consumed with the facility.
Gas Meters
Gas meter vendors also provide a pulse output or a high-level interface via Bacnet, Lon or Modbus to the BMS or Energy Management System (EMS).
Gas metering is typical via a pulse input to a controller, a given number of pulses provides a given volume of gas. This data assists the assessment and provides constructive information building managers to implement energy conservation strategies.