Identify & rectify05 February 2020

Rising energy costs have created an atmosphere of uncertainty for many UK businesses. Correctly identifying and accounting for potential energy losses could help save money on fuel bills

Energy costs have the potential to be considerably high and could limit growth potential. It’s easy to understand how a business can spend so much on energy costs when, in my experience, our engineers have routinely identified that boilerhouse managers tend to believe that they are operating at an efficiency level 15% higher than they actually are. This is likely due to them not having complete visibility of their boilerhouse components.

With economic uncertainty dampening the abilities of businesses to compete in a domestic and global market, companies are under increasing pressure to reduce operational costs. With this uncertain atmosphere in mind, energy managers can often find themselves tasked with identifying the efficiency of the boilerhouse in order to remedy this situation.

In my experience, the means of monitoring energy in most boilerhouses can quite often be limited. This can, therefore, translate into a limited knowledge of overall boilerhouse performance, with facilities often unaware of where energy losses could be identified.

Indeed, it is frequently the case that boiler operators will be making use of the burner efficiency to indicate the overall efficiency of the boilerhouse. What they may be unaware of is that this method does not highlight all of the potential energy losses that can occur due to factors such as dirty heat transfer surfaces, carryover, radiation losses and excessive boiler blowdown rates.

By making use of burner efficiency for overall boilerhouse efficiency, boiler operators may be overestimating the performance of the system. They would gain a better understanding of their boilerhouse by metering all of the energy entering the boiler – both fuel and feedwater – and comparing this with the useful energy exiting the boiler in the steam.

This type of monitoring was once only possible by investing heavily in building management systems (BMS) or supervisory control and data acquisition (SCADA) software systems. Monitoring in this way was a costly means of measuring energy use and could be prohibitive for smaller businesses. The upfront investment in such systems was not a cost-effective means of measurement, as they only log non-compliant operations as opposed to providing the ‘why’ that exists behind that data. This is critical for those who operate the boiler; as without it, they could find themselves failing to observe where energy costs could be reduced, and efficiency improved.

As has already been identified, boilerhouse operators tend to overestimate the performance of their energy systems. As such, it could transpire that energy losses are greater than first anticipated, resulting in increased fuel costs to account for creeping losses via the flue, radiation, distribution, flash, blowdown or condensate. Take manual blowdown, for example. If it is insufficient, it can cause scaling, which may result in rising energy costs. On the other hand, excessive manual blowdown can increase water usage – another undesirable outcome.

Using historical trending of plant data, it is possible to better understand the fuel consumption, feedwater usage, steam production, condensate return and blowdown volumes of the boilerhouse. Logging the amount of condensate being returned to the boiler’s feedwater system, for instance, enables boiler operators to accurately manage the water treatment plant output and better identify potential opportunities to increase fuel efficiency and reduce associated fuel, water and effluent costs.

THE PATH TO SUCCESS
Yet data analysis is only a first step; while teams may be accustomed to some level of distribution loss, the true numbers can only be discerned with a monitoring system that provides a complete overview of the system. Spirax Sarco’s B850 boilerhouse energy monitor (pictured, left), for example, offers a means of measuring the overall boilerhouse efficiency, based on measured inputs from the fuel, feedwater, steam output, condensate return and blowdown. Cost-conscious boiler operators can utilise this data to make improvements in the efficiency of their steam system – yielding energy savings and reductions in the financial expenditure of the business.

With the right data in-hand, operators and teams can systematically improve the steam system to limit the energy losses at multiple points. Take for instance water treatment and boiler water conditioning. This has significant potential for improving overall energy efficiency and lowering the total cost of ownership of plant.

Treatment can help to prevent the build-up of alkaline deposits on heat transfer surfaces. Without treatment, these deposits could form layers that act as a barrier against effective heat transfer, reducing the energy efficiency of the boiler dramatically. For example, a deposit layer just one millimetre thick could lower system efficiency by around 10%.

There are also several other areas around the full boilerhouse system where losses can be found, such as the economisers, flue-gas shut-off dampers and blowdown heat recovery. Equally, where there are losses, there is scope for efficiency savings. To achieve this, boilerhouse operators can help themselves and their businesses by making use of intelligent monitoring systems.

BACK IN THE GAME
UK businesses may continue to suffer from weakened competitiveness due to rising energy costs and an increasingly uncertain economic environment. Yet these businesses could reduce their operational costs by monitoring the energy performance of their boilerhouse.

By cutting the costs of this energy, businesses could find that they are able to save money on their fuel bills. The rigorous monitoring of the energy performance of the boilerhouse provides the foundations for cost-saving and reductions in fuel consumption.

The future is uncertain enough, but the finer detail of the operator’s steam system doesn’t have to be – with an energy monitoring system, losses can be quickly identified and rectified to put a stop to excess waste.

BOX OUT: Boilerhouse efficiency guide launched
To explore this subject in more detail, Spirax Sarco’s Darren Silverthorn has recently published a guide on the core challenges with traditional boilerhouse energy measurement and areas for improvement. ‘A guide to identifying the true efficiency of your boilerhouse’ aims to support operational management teams by highlighting areas for improvement that could be made to enhance efficiency and reduce the money spent paying for energy. It is available at: www.is.gd/utalov


Darren Silverthorn, Spirax Sarco

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