Overall Rating | Platinum - expired |
---|---|
Overall Score | 85.05 |
Liaison | Lisa Kilgore |
Submission Date | March 5, 2020 |
Executive Letter | Download |
Cornell University
OP-6: Clean and Renewable Energy
Status | Score | Responsible Party |
---|---|---|
0.74 / 4.00 |
Mark
Howe Program Manager Energy Managment |
"---"
indicates that no data was submitted for this field
Total energy consumption (all sources, excluding transportation fuels), performance year :
3,422,061
MMBtu
Option 1
25,205
MMBtu
None
A brief description of on-site renewable electricity generating devices :
Cornell owns and operates two hydroelectric generators. The turbine manufacturer is Ossberger and the units are rated at 712 kw and 997 kw. In addition, there are multiple campus building with roof-top PV.
FY19 generation 77,787 kWh
Klarman, HEB,Day Hall, Campus Store
Option 2
559,827
MMBtu
None
A brief description of on-site renewable non-electric energy devices:
Cornell also has a heat exchange facility (Lake Source Cooling) to produce up to 18,000 peak tons of chilled water for campus. It generates renewable cooling by exchange heat to cold water from deep in Cayuga Lake saving >80% of the energy of conventional cooling (~25 million kWhr/year, about 10% of total campus electricity usage).
Cornell has installed two solar hydronic hot water systems. The systems use the solar energy to heat water in evacuated tube solar collectors. The systems are designed to offset the need for fossil fuels to provide a portion of the heating and hot water needs of two campus facilities (23 total panels with 30 tubes each). Each tube is rated at 1,000 btu/day at peak summer solar insolation.
Option 3
44,126
MMBtu
None
A brief description of off-site, institution-catalyzed, renewable electricity generating devices:
Cornell has seven PV arrays located on Cornell property. The generation is credited to the Ithaca campus via remote net metering by NYSEG. Cornell was responsible for catalyzing these projects.
The generation is purchased via Power Purchase Agreements.
Cornell owns the environmental attributes and officially retires those attributes via the New York state attribute tracking system. The retirements are approved & document in RGGI.
Option 4
0
MMBtu
A brief description of the RECs, GOs and/or similar renewable energy products, including contract timeframes:
n/a
Optional Fields
Additional documentation to support the submission:
---
Sierra magazine requests the following information from U.S. institutions that wish to share data with that organization:
Percentage of total electricity use (0-100) | |
Biomass | 2.10 |
Coal | 2.10 |
Geothermal | --- |
Hydro | 31.60 |
Natural gas | 21.70 |
Nuclear | 31.40 |
Solar photovoltaic | --- |
Wind | 4.70 |
Other (please specify and explain below) | 0.10 |
A brief description of other sources of electricity not specified above:
Other: Includes fuel oil, PV
Notes: the %'s above are upstate NY State Grid values (eGRID2016) issued Jan 2018
Cornell operates an on site co-generation plant, which is 99% natural gas
Cornell operates an on-site small scale hydro-plant, which provides approximately 2% of campus electric usage.
Energy used for heating buildings, by source::
Percentage of total energy used to heat buildings (0-100) | |
Biomass | --- |
Coal | --- |
Electricity | --- |
Fuel oil | 0.01 |
Geothermal | --- |
Natural gas | 99.90 |
Other (please specify and explain below) | --- |
A brief description of other sources of building heating not specified above:
---
Percentage of total energy consumption from clean and renewable sources:
18.39
Data source(s) and notes about the submission:
---
The information presented here is self-reported. While AASHE staff review portions of all STARS reports and institutions are welcome to seek additional forms of review, the data in STARS reports are not verified by AASHE. If you believe any of this information is erroneous or inconsistent with credit criteria, please review the process for inquiring about the information reported by an institution or simply email your inquiry to stars@aashe.org.