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NYISO report highlights New York energy market “transformation”
New York state’s transition to competitive electricity markets has contributed to “dramatic benefits for consumers and the state’s power grid, including nearly $7 billion in savings and reduced costs and significant reductions in emissions, among numerous other impacts.” That’s according to a new report issued June 8 by the New York Independent System Operator […]
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New York state’s transition to competitive electricity markets has contributed to “dramatic benefits for consumers and the state’s power grid, including nearly $7 billion in savings and reduced costs and significant reductions in emissions, among numerous other impacts.”
That’s according to a new report issued June 8 by the New York Independent System Operator (NYISO), the nonprofit that has operated New York state’s power grid since December 1999.
The report, entitled “Powering New York — Responsibly,” looks at the 15-year period since the start of New York’s competitive market for wholesale electricity in 2000. The organization quantifies the major contributions it says it made to help the state meet its future energy needs and achieve its goals for cleaner energy and improved efficiency.
“The federal and state policy decisions that produced electric industry restructuring were founded on the conviction that competitive wholesale electricity markets expeditiously and effectively facilitate evolution of the grid,” NYISO president and CEO Stephen Whitley said in a news release announcing the release of the report. “Throughout its first decade and a half, New York’s competitive marketplace for electricity has helped achieve that vision by sustaining and enhancing reliability, fostering efficiencies to reduce costs, and cultivating the growth of cleaner, renewable supplies of electricity.”
The report says New York has realized the following benefits since 2000:
• $6.4 billion in fuel cost savings from increases in fuel efficiency in electricity generation from 2000 through 2013. This exceeds national fuel efficiency gains by 300 percent.
• $540 million in consumer cost savings from reduced power-resource reserve requirements.
• The reduction in annual carbon emissions associated with power generation, including the elimination of nearly 25 million tons of carbon emissions in 2013 when compared to 1999. That’s a 41 percent reduction and the equivalent of taking 4.8 million passenger vehicles off the road.
• The Empire State’s wind-power generation has jumped from 103 gigawatt-hours in 2003 to 3,541 gigawatt-hours in 2013 — enough electricity to power 490,000 New York homes.
Many of the benefits have come from the competitive auctions of wholesale electricity that the NYISO conducts and monitors every five minutes throughout each day, the organization said.
In the competitive market, utilities have sold most of their generators while retaining ownership of the transmission and delivery system. Electricity producers, which had previously received predictable revenues from utility rates, now compete for revenues in an open market, the NYISO added. Before 2000, energy rates were set by state regulators and provided utilities with “guaranteed returns” on their investments.
“The story of New York’s wholesale power markets is a successful one. The NYISO’s competitive wholesale markets have provided consumers significant value in the form of dramatic cost savings, new investments in cleaner and more efficient technologies and improved electric grid reliability,” State Senator Joseph Griffo (R–Rome), New York State Senate Energy and Telecommunications Committee chair, contended in the news release.
Heather C. Briccetti, president and CEO of the Business Council of New York State, Inc., added, “This report highlights what we’ve all known for a long time; the NYISO works. Since its inception, the NYISO has dramatically reduced consumer costs, while at the same time increasing system reliability and ensuring New York is prepared for future changes in the generation and delivery of energy.”
The NYISO said that between 2000 and 2013, nearly 6,000 MW of older, noncompetitive generation was retired from service in the state, while private and public power suppliers added more than 10,400 MW of new, more efficient generation.
Based in the Capital Region, the NYISO is governed by a 10-member independent board of directors. The NYISO, which monitors a network of almost 11,000 miles of high-voltage transmission lines across the state, generated nearly $160 million in revenue in 2013, according to its annual report.
Syracuse Housing Authority to use financing for energy-saving appliances
SYRACUSE — The Syracuse Housing Authority (SHA) has plans to purchase energy-saving appliances and materials for 13 Syracuse housing sites throughout the city. First Niagara Bank (NASDAQ: FNFG) is the lender in the $5 million financing deal for the conservation equipment, the Buffalo–based banking company announced in a June 3 news release. The
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SYRACUSE — The Syracuse Housing Authority (SHA) has plans to purchase energy-saving appliances and materials for 13 Syracuse housing sites throughout the city.
First Niagara Bank (NASDAQ: FNFG) is the lender in the $5 million financing deal for the conservation equipment, the Buffalo–based banking company announced in a June 3 news release.
The Syracuse Housing Authority operates at 516 Burt St. in Syracuse.
SHA owns and manages 15 housing developments with more than 2,500 apartments, according to its website. Just over half the apartments are designated for the elderly or disabled with the remainder set aside for families.
Improvements will include new lighting, insulation, water-conservation measures, temperature controls, and weather stripping.
First Niagara expects the energy and water savings to total $7.5 million over the 16-year contract term, the bank said.
“The funding from this loan will bring tremendous value to our communities,” William Simmons, executive director of SHA, said in the news release. “The improvements will be beneficial both economically and environmentally. We found an ideal partner with First Niagara, the team worked with us to tailor the finances to our needs.”
CNYBJ left messages with Simmons for additional program details but didn’t get a response before press time.
First Niagara is helping SHA in its ongoing efforts in energy conservation and overall efficiency, Robert Fenner, vice president of government banking at First Niagara, said in the news release.
“The First Niagara team designed a financial package that helped the agency provide quality, safe and affordable housing,” said Fenner.
Installation of the energy-conservation measures began this past March and will be complete by the end of the year, according to the release.
“There is a growing trend in the industry to utilize this type of financing, and it is helping agencies like SHA save money and conserve energy,” Donna Scibetta, vice president of leasing at First Niagara, said.
The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) funds the Syracuse Housing Authority. HUD is a federal agency that administers the cash flow of operating subsidy funds to all public-housing authorities in the U.S.
SHA is one of 3,500 housing authorities located across the nation.
First Niagara is a multi-state, community-oriented bank with about 390 branches, $39 billion in assets, $28 billion in deposits, and about 5,300 employees across
New York, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, and Massachusetts.
First Niagara Bank ranked fourth in deposit market share in the 16-county Central New York market, according to June 30, 2014, FDIC statistics, the latest available. The bank had $2.2 million in deposits, good for an 8.4 percent share of the CNY market’s total deposits.
Ithaca company awarded $1M for energy-efficiency pilot
THACA — Performance Systems Development, an Ithaca–based firm that develops tools and provides services to improve energy efficiency in residential and commercial buildings, was awarded $1 million by the U.S. Department of Energy on May 5 to pilot a new program called the OpenEfficiency Initiative. The initiative seeks to improve the energy efficiency of commercial
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THACA — Performance Systems Development, an Ithaca–based firm that develops tools and provides services to improve energy efficiency in residential and commercial buildings, was awarded $1 million by the U.S. Department of Energy on May 5 to pilot a new program called the OpenEfficiency Initiative.
The initiative seeks to improve the energy efficiency of commercial and multi-family buildings across the country by helping standardize the different programs — offered by utility companies, state agencies, counties, and cities — that incentivize building owners to invest in using higher-efficiency building models. That’s according to Gregory Thomas, founder and CEO of Performance Systems Development (PSD), which employs nearly 50 people.
The effort includes standardizing these programs’ use of different tools the Department of Energy (DOE) has invested in and helped develop, says Thomas. Of particular importance are the tools that look at whole-building energy use. In other words, the tools that would help improve an entire building’s energy efficiency, rather than just one component, like light bulbs. But the DOE has never been able to put those tools together into an enterprise-level framework for administering the programs, according to Thomas.
“That’s what we’re doing. We’re putting those tools together, and we’re hoping to drop the cost — to significantly drop the cost — of helping buildings achieve on deep-energy retrofits” and in making new buildings more efficient, Thomas says.
Efficiency tools
One example of a tool the DOE helped develop is OpenStudio, a collection of predictive energy–modeling software that run physics models of buildings in order to determine their energy usage, says Thomas.
The software factors the types of walls, windows, heating systems, and cooling systems into a model, as well as the weather in the area the structure is, or will be. Within the model, the user can change the type of window, for example, to determine how that would affect the building’s energy usage, according to Thomas.
Despite the DOE having worked on a number of such tools, says Thomas, much of it has been largely experimental, or used on a smaller scale. The DOE is providing PSD, Thomas’ company, with funding to “commercialize these tools so that people are not research projects, but that people are actually using them,” he says.
PSD is in an ideal position to accomplish this because of its existing relationships with several DOE-funded labs that help develop its building-efficiency tools, such as the Colorado–based National Renewable Energy Laboratory, the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in California, and the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Washington state, according to Thomas.
Efficiency programs
In order to entice uninterested or hesitant building owners into making their buildings energy efficient, the government and utilities offer programs that provide up-front funding in return for such an investment.
“Fundamentally, it’s hard to give away money,” says Thomas, explaining that it’s often public money, so there are a lot of rules associated with administrating those funds, rules he describes as being burdensome and difficult.
“We’re trying to break through that,” he says.
One significant problem facing PSD is the sheer quantity of these programs, says Thomas. Programs like these are offered by utility companies, state agencies, and county and city governments — what Thomas calls “program administrators.” In order to improve the functionality of these programs, and to integrate the DOE tools so they can be commercialized, Thomas says the OpenEfficiency Initiative will also help create templates for program designs, so there is less variance among the programs.
The initiative
Tackling all of these layers — commercializing the DOE tools, applying them to the many existing programs, standardizing those programs — is intended to reduce the cost of delivering the programs, says Thomas, in turn prompting more building owners to make their buildings energy efficient.
A news release issued by the DOE announcing the award money states that last year, 20 percent of the country’s energy usage was by commercial buildings, leaving room for billions of potential savings annually by making them more efficient.
The first real step for the initiative is to have collaborative meetings with administrators, says Thomas. There are a whole bunch of puzzle pieces that his company needs to make fit together, he says. And PSD also needs to work with the individual administrators to help them deploy the software to support their programs. After that, it will begin training people — architects and engineers — to use the tools.
A concrete goal that PSD is working toward right now is getting commitments from program administrators in at least three states to run the pilot of the OpenEfficiency Initiative. Thomas says he has commitments from the Los Angeles County Office of Sustainability in California, and from the utility provider Xcel in Colorado and Minnesota.
PSD is also in talks with program administrators in New York and Pennsylvania, but has not yet received commitments, according to Thomas, declining to name the administrators.
Xcel has already utilized some of the tools that the initiative will be marketing, says Thomas, so it’s looking to further extend its use of the tools. They began implementing them a little over one year ago, and he says Xcel is estimating that it is saving about $500,000 per year as a direct result.
PSD also has two partners in the initiative. Cadmus, a Massachusetts–based evaluation consulting firm, is helping the utilities with regulatory issues related to the calculation of savings, says Thomas, and helping to make those calculations.
Its other partner is the DOE’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory in Colorado. It developed some of the tools being used in the initiative, and has been funded to add new features, says Thomas.
DOE funding
The OpenEfficiency Initiative will provide 300 buildings with at least 20 percent in energy savings, two requirements for receiving the grant money. The initiative is expected to easily overshoot the 300 building minimum, says Thomas.
Seven other companies received awards (PSD is the only New York–based company) from the DOE as part of a larger effort to improve the energy efficiency of buildings across the country, according to the DOE news release. None of the other awards was larger than $1 million.
Thomas say PSD submitted the application for funding to the DOE this past January. Without the grant, he says it would have been very difficult to develop a business model for the initiative.
“We were very excited to win it,” he says. “There was a lot of footwork that went into it, a lot of preparation.” Part of that footwork was securing $1 million in funding from other sources to match the DOE award, says Thomas, another requirement. PSD secured the funding from its partners, particularly Xcel and the L.A. County Office of Sustainability, according to Thomas.
The total cost of the OpenEfficiency Initiative pilot will be more than $2 million. Thomas says being more precise than that is difficult because it depends on what is counted. He says if incentives that will be provided by program administrators are included, the cost of the program increases significantly.
The DOE would like to see the initiative become huge, says Thomas. It expects PSD to recruit more program administrators, in part, with the grant money, but Thomas says his company’s focus right now is on getting the initiative up and running. Additional recruiting will come after. He expects a lot of administrators that don’t want to commit to the initiative right now will warm to the idea once successful implementation of tools and programs has been achieved.
The company
Thomas, the majority owner of Performance Systems Development, founded the company in Ithaca in 1998 as a solo venture. Since then, it has added three more offices — all in Pennsylvania — in Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, and Meadville. PSD leases space at 124 Brindley St. in Ithaca for its headquarters office, which has about 20 employees. The company has 47 employees in total, nearly all of whom are full-time, says Thomas.
The business plans to hire two more employees in the engineering and programming fields as a result of the DOE grant, says Thomas, adding that it will hire more as participating program administrators need additional support.
The company’s biggest years for growth came following the 2008 financial crisis, when significant money was being invested in energy-efficiency companies and technologies, according to Thomas. He declined to disclose PSD’s revenue history.
Thomas lived in Syracuse for 10 years before moving to Ithaca to start PSD. While there, he says he worked for a now-defunct consulting firm, called Synertech, developing new energy-efficiency technologies for low–income programs in the state. He was able to apply those years later after he took over an energy service nonprofit called Syresco (Syracuse Energy Service Company).
LaBella Associates launches division focused on power systems
Rochester–based LaBella Associates, P.C., an architectural and engineering firm, on June 1 launched a new division that focuses on power systems. LaBella operates local offices in the Syracuse Tech Garden and at 202 The Commons in Ithaca. It also has upstate offices in Buffalo, Hornell, Corning, with additional out-of-state locations in Pennsylvania, Ohio, and North
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Rochester–based LaBella Associates, P.C., an architectural and engineering firm, on June 1 launched a new division that focuses on power systems.
LaBella operates local offices in the Syracuse Tech Garden and at 202 The Commons in Ithaca. It also has upstate offices in Buffalo, Hornell, Corning, with additional out-of-state locations in Pennsylvania, Ohio, and North Carolina. The firm also has an office in Madrid, Spain.
LaBella Associates employs 340 people and specializes in architecture, engineering, environmental consulting, surveying, planning, and grant writing.
The newest division will help service the electrical-supply industry from substation automation to infrastructure-upgrade projects.
LaBella Associates has provided this service for utility companies since 1984, a spokesperson for LaBella Associates said in response to an email inquiry from CNYBJ.
Citing workload and staffing needs, LaBella Associates decided to create the power-systems division in order to “focus more” on the electrical-utility work.
“Providing this service better aligns the experience and abilities of personnel and other resources with the needs of our clients in this highly specialized field,” the spokesperson said.
LaBella during the last two years has made “substantial” investments of about $1.2 million in personnel, software, and other technology to develop its ability to serve the power-system market.
Catalyst for growth
Over the past few years, power-system distribution has been a “catalyst for growth” throughout the company, according to a company news release.
When asked to elaborate, the spokeswoman said the growth occurred in its employee count, client roster, and in sales.
LaBella generated $40 million in revenue during 2014, up 27 percent from the prior year, she said.
That growth resulted from LaBella employees, directors, and marketing staff working across divisional lines as the firm developed the new service area.
Sean Evans, who has more than 14 years of power-systems experience, will serve as the new division director. LaBella hired Evans to “oversee all electrical work in the division,” the spokeswoman said.
His team includes Fernando Sanchez, power-systems engineering manager, who oversees LaBella’s office in Madrid, Spain.
Additionally, LaBella has hired 20 engineers and technicians, according to Robert Pepe, CFO of LaBella. Depending on workload, the company could be hiring more people in the near future, he added.
“This unique evolution has provided LaBella the opportunity to seek out new clients and new geographies,” Robert Healy, company president, said in the news release.
When asked to elaborate on the meaning of new geographies, the spokeswoman wrote in the email response, “LaBella explores opportunities locally and globally.”
When asked to name any clients that the firm is servicing with the new division, the LaBella spokeswoman would only say that its clients include “several large local utility companies.” The firm can also offer the services in this division to additional market sectors such as municipalities, industrial, renewable, and higher education.
“LaBella looks forward to exploring new options with different utility companies locally and globally to increase revenue and employee growth,” the company said.
SBA honors ECO-Foam Insulators president as Young Entrepreneur of the Year
OSWEGO — The Syracuse district office of the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) last month honored Matthew Magrisi, president of ECO-Foam Insulators, Inc. of Oswego, as its 2015 Young Entrepreneur of the Year Award. The Oswego Small Business Development Center (SBDC) nominated Magrisi for the honor. The SBA chose him for the award based
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OSWEGO — The Syracuse district office of the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) last month honored Matthew Magrisi, president of ECO-Foam Insulators, Inc. of Oswego, as its 2015 Young Entrepreneur of the Year Award.
The Oswego Small Business Development Center (SBDC) nominated Magrisi for the honor. The SBA chose him for the award based on his company’s “increase in sales and profits and his demonstrated long-term potential as a successful business owner,” according to a news release.
Magrisi received his award at the SBA Syracuse district office’s annual awards luncheon on May 11 at the DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel in DeWitt, near Carrier Circle.
About ECO-Foam Insulators
Magrisi and his wife Stephanie in 2012 began ECO-Foam Insulators, after they graduated from the Oswego SBDC’s small-business training class.
The company seeks to “help home and business owners conserve energy,” according to the SBA news release.
With continued counseling from SBDC senior business advisor John Halleron, the 27-year-old Magrisi accessed funding from a local development agency to purchase equipment and obtained a line of credit for cash-flow management, the SBA said. It didn’t name the development agency.
Besides “environmentally friendly” insulation products, ECO-Foam also offers energy-efficient windows, doors, and construction materials.
In its fourth year in business, ECO-Foam employs a “factory-trained” staff with two full-time and two part-time employees.
Before starting ECO-Foam, Magrisi worked as an estimator with a construction business. He also operated his own lawn-care business after high school, the SBA said.
New Initiatives Advance Our Regional Export Growth Strategies
When CenterState CEO and its partners launched the CenterState Metropolitan Export Initiative, regional exports were a little more than $6 billion; today they have grown to almost $7 billion. While this growth is encouraging evidence of progress, we continue to find new ways to realize our region’s true export potential. This is why I am excited
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When CenterState CEO and its partners launched the CenterState Metropolitan Export Initiative, regional exports were a little more than $6 billion; today they have grown to almost $7 billion. While this growth is encouraging evidence of progress, we continue to find new ways to realize our region’s true export potential. This is why I am excited to share with you the launch of two new initiatives that will support business growth and advance our joint global trade and investment strategy to grow our regional economy.
The first is the development of a foreign direct investment plan for the region. Syracuse is just one of six metros selected by the Brookings Institution and JPMorgan Chase to develop a regional plan to attract and leverage foreign direct investment. This work builds on the existing regional export plan, developed as part of the Global Cities Initiative, a joint project of the Brookings Institution and JPMorgan Chase, by advancing a second core component of the region’s global engagement and investment strategy. Others metros selected include Atlanta, Los Angeles, Milwaukee, Des Moines, and the Greenville-Spartanburg-Anderson metro in South Carolina.
Also, JPMorgan Chase awarded CenterState CEO a $40,000 grant to establish an Export Catalyst Pilot Program, targeting middle market businesses in the region. Through the program, up to six companies that have a globally competitive product but lack experience or capacity for international sales, will be matched with export specialists to provide market identification and assessment, entry requirements and buyer identification services. Through mentoring and one-on-one skills training, company staff will gain the knowledge and experience they need to continue to grow internationally. Our goal is to create a permanent program following the pilot to ensure continued growth for middle-market companies in the area.
These and other export consultation and assistance services are available to you as we continue to strengthen the region’s global connections and competitiveness. Businesses interested in leveraging global opportunities should reach out to Steven King, executive director of the Central New York International Business Alliance, at (315) 470-1800 or email: sking@cnyiba.net.
Robert M. (Rob) Simpson is president and CEO of CenterState CEO, the primary economic-development organization for Central New York. This editorial is drawn and edited from the “CEO Focus” email newsletter the organization sent to members on June 5.
Community Bank says deal to acquire Oneida Financial needs more time
DeWITT, N.Y. — Community Bank System Inc. (NYSE: CBU) says it expects “additional time will be required” to obtain the “necessary” regulatory approvals to complete
JPMorgan Chase awards OCC $220K grant for workforce-development program
ONONDAGA, N.Y. — JPMorgan Chase & Co. (NYSE: JPM) has awarded Onondaga Community College (OCC) a grant of $220,000 to support the school’s workforce-development efforts.
ProMedia to formally open Utica office on June 16
UTICA, N.Y. — Professional Media Services, Inc. (ProMedia) is formally opening its new facility at Canal Park at 215 Leland Ave. in Utica on June
Schumer urges Danaher CEO to protect Pall Corp. jobs in Cortlandville
U.S. Senator Charles Schumer (D–N.Y.) has urged the top official at Danaher Corp. to “protect” 650 existing jobs the Pall Corp. plant in Cortlandville. Schumer
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