Showing posts with label TVA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TVA. Show all posts

Thursday, April 23, 2015

TVA Cancels Outage Planned for Sherwood

The Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) has canceled the power outage scheduled for Saturday, April 25, for Duck River Electric Membership Corporation members living in the communities of Sherwood and Anderson of Franklin County.

The outage is now scheduled for 6 a.m. to 10 a.m., Saturday, May 9. 

This outage is necessary for TVA to replace several bad poles. It will affect all consumers in the Sherwood and Anderson area, but will not affect consumers in Sewanee, Cowan and Sinking Cove. In the event of inclement weather, the outage will be rescheduled for May 30. 


Duck River Electric appreciates the cooperation and understanding of its members during this planned outage, as it strives to improve the reliability of the electric system. 

Thursday, October 30, 2014

“Little Things” Save Big Money for County Schools

by Kevin Cummings, Messenger Staff Writer


On some nights Brian Norwood roams the halls of darkened schools searching for wasted energy.
His efforts and that of personnel throughout Franklin County schools have saved more than $1 million in utility costs since the inception of a systemwide conservation program.

Franklin County schools hired national energy conservation firm Cenergistic about three years ago and tabbed Norwood, a former Franklin County High School teacher, as the system’s new energy education specialist.

“When the audits first started, they were kind of atrocious,” Norwood said.

He tracks utility usage and performs school audits, day and night, to look for ways to save, including making sure thermostats are properly set, nonessential lights and other electricity sources are turned off, and windows and doors are weatherized.

“The success of this program rides on the shoulders of the people who are in these buildings: the teachers, custodians and building administrators,” he said. “I can walk through this building and do audits all day long, but the savings come from the folks in the buildings who are taking care of business day after day.”

On Oct. 29, Norwood audited Sewanee Elementary school. He first used a psychrometer to measure temperature, humidity and dew point. A temperature gun helps him read the temperatures through cracks in the doors of locked classrooms. If it is plus or minus two or three degrees of the target, he’ll go in and see if the thermostat is correct or if the room is holding the temperature.

“During break times we shut buildings down to the bare bones, almost nothing,” Norwood noted.
Compared to where they were before the energy program, some county schools have reduced utility costs by 40 percent, and the system is now spending about 19.5 percent less on utilities.

“Working with Cenergistic has helped us all be more conscious about our energy usage,” said Rebecca Sharber, director of schools. The savings have “helped keep us from cutting our budget even more than we have. It has also helped improve the environmental footprint,” she said.Norwood noted that the school system has reduced CO2 emissions by 4,237 metric tons, the equivalent of taking 883 cars off the road. They have also reduced BTU use by 37,000.

As the SES audit continued, he found weather stripping on a door near the SES playground that needed repair. He checked water fountains to make sure coolers weren’t running and offered greetings to the workers in the cafeteria as he bragged about their efforts. He turned off computer monitors, looked for water leaks, checked window temps and applauded one teacher for using ambient lighting in her classroom.

He said Sewanee Elementary has a tradition of conserving energy and is now spending two percent less on utilities since three years ago. 

“They were doing everything right to begin with,” he said.

SES principal Mike Maxon, who taught math to Norwood in middle school, said he encourages teachers to be conscientious of their energy use and reminds them that we are all taxpayers.
During the week of Oct. 27, Norwood’s onsite audits also included South Middle School. South is challenged by having much of the original equipment from 1968, when the school was built, but is now spending 15 percent less than three years ago.

“It’s like the saying, ‘I’m analog living in a digital world.’ South is kind of like that,” Norwood said.
At South, because the main lights are on one switch, all nonessential lights can’t be cut off at night because the school’s security cameras won’t work in the dark. And the air handlers, because of their age, also can’t be shut down completely.

There have been many behavioral and procedural changes throughout the system since the program’s inception, such as keeping buildings at 58 degrees at night and encouraging teachers not to plug in personal appliances at school.

A $1.2 million grant from Excel Energy Group in 2010 also made it possible to upgrade school lighting, said Cindy Latham, Franklin County deputy finance director.

The savings in utility costs does more than offset both Norwood’s salary and the annual payment to Cenergistic, but the real savings will come at the end of the contract with Cenergistic. The payments end after no more than five years, and Cenergistic will still be available to help in a reduced consultation role.

Latham said the school system pays $201,000 annually to Cenergistic for its services.
The school system has also partnered with TVA and Winchester Utilities on a program to install smart electricity meters at Franklin County High School, which accounts for one-third of the school system’s utility costs, Norwood said. FCHS is the second largest high school in the state at more than 300,000 square feet. The meters allow Norwood to closely monitor energy usage—even using his cell phone—and helps avoid additional demand charges from TVA if the electricity load reaches a certain level at one time.

Cenergistic will present Franklin County School System with its Energy Excellence Award at the Nov. 3 school board work session.

Thursday, October 3, 2013

DREMC to Pass Through TVA Rate Increase

Duck River Electric Membership Corporation (DREMC) members will see a rate increase Oct. 1 due to the rising cost of wholesale electricity from the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA). DREMC’s board of directors voted last week to pass through the TVA’s recent wholesale power increase. On Aug. 22, the TVA board approved a 1.5 percent hike in the cost of electricity provided to distributors in the region. It was the first such increase since 2011.

At the retail level, the effect of the wholesale rate increase will be around 1.5 percent, according to Michael Watson, president and chief executive officer of DREMC.

Residential members can expect to see their electric bills for 1,000 kilowatt-hours (kWh) go up $1.42 per month on average.

“All the additional revenue derived from this wholesale rate adjustment goes to TVA in the power bill,” Watson pointed out.

In the past fiscal year, more than 75 cents of every dollar paid to DREMC for electricity went to purchase wholesale power.

“The wholesale cost is the largest component of what we must charge our members,” Watson said.

“While we never like to see rates increase for those we serve, this was TVA’s decision. Our board passed along the adjustment in order to keep our revenues in line with the cost of service,” he said.
Watson noted that DREMC will launch a residential demand response program this winter to help members offset the higher cost of electricity. The voluntary program, called Beat the Peak, aims to reduce demand on the system during extremely cold and hot periods when the cost of wholesale power can soar to $9.50 per kWh from an average of 7 to 8 cents.


TVA blamed declining demand for electricity, a continued slow economic recovery in the region and higher operating costs for the need to adjust wholesale rates.

TVA President and CEO Bill Johnson pledged that his priority is for the multi-state generation-and-transmission utility to live within its means, but sales and revenue are declining at a faster rate than cost reductions can stabilize the budget.

He said the wholesale power increase was necessary to meet 2014 revenue requirements and ensure the safe and reliable operation of the TVA system.

“We will also make critical capital investments to keep reliability high and meet environmental standards and contribute to paying down debt,” Johnson said.

TVA’s fiscal year 2014 budget anticipates 4.6 percent lower sales year-over-year and is about 6 percent less than 2013. It includes capital expenditures of $3.3 billion for Watts Bar 2 nuclear plant and clean air controls at Gallatin Fossil Plant.

Duck River Electric Membership Corporation, headquartered in Shelbyville, Tenn., is a Touchstone Energy Cooperative serving 72,000 residences, businesses and farms. District offices are located in Columbia, Manchester, Decherd, Sewanee, Shelbyville, Lynchburg and Lewisburg.

[Disclosure notice: Messenger Editor/Publisher Laura Willis is a compensated member of the Duck River Electric Membership Corporation’s board of directors, appointed by the University’s Board of Regents to represent Sewanee.]

Thursday, March 7, 2013

Power Outage This Weekend


Daylight Savings Time begins at 2 a.m., Sunday, March 10. Clocks get moved ahead by one hour as we “spring forward” into the annual time change.

Also, TVA has a four-hour power outage scheduled for the Sewanee community between midnight and 4 a.m., Sunday, March 10. TVA will be working on the high-tension power lines below the Memorial Cross. The communities of Sherwood, Anderson, Sinking Cove and Cowan in Franklin County will not be affected by this scheduled outage.

Many electronic devices such as cell phones and computers automatically adjust when Daylight Savings Time begins or ends. However, traditional clocks and watches must be reset; this is a good time to change batteries in household smoke detectors. 

According to the National Institute of Standards and Technology, Daylight Savings Time was extended by the Energy Policy Act of 2005 in the interest of reducing energy consumption. DST is now in effect for 238 days or about 65 percent of the year. Daylight Savings Time in the U.S. now begins at 2 a.m. on the second Sunday of March and ends at 2 a.m. on the first Sunday of November.