Here is a bit more info. We have actual steam consumption data for the building going back many years. We have picked a representative year to base our comparison on, HDD data for the year looks in-line with the past 10 year average, we have month to month data. Both the district steam supplier and potential gas supplier have looked at this assumption and agree it is good data to use. We have both consumption and demand data from the district steam invoice for this period. Consumption is 36,000 Mlb and peak demand has been about 12,000 lbs/hr, the boiler plant has been specified given this information. We think we have a good feel for the project cost, should be about $4M, including A/E fees. We have seen very good pricing for these types of projects in our depressed construction market, I suspect it may very well go lower. Anyway, we will have hard bids soon to put a firm figure on that cost.
We have addressed fuel, non-fuel, and demand costs on the district steam side. They are using all natural gas like we will and have installed cogeneration equipment that will give them an edge of about 7% on carbon emissions, assuming a 10% system loss (they are looking at giving us a better number for this, they apparently don't have it handy). I'm waiting on our energy guy to give me a figure for the value of the carbon difference, which will subtract from the boiler install side, though at first glance, he believes it is not significant.
For natural gas, we are using the current interruptible rate, which is running about $6.50/MCF. We have included the cost of a maintenance contract and time for building maintenance personnel (about 1 hr/day) on the boiler plant side--plant will be low pressure. Savings amount to about $400,000/year with the boiler install (30 year boilers) and we feel pretty good about that number. Simple payback of 10 years. Discounted payback (2%, per OMB circular A-94, see link below) adds a year or two. I was just wondering at what point does a project like this begin to be questionable from a payback standpoint. Is it 13 years? This is not an energy conservation project, though we do intend on doing some down the road that could adversely impact the return on the boiler install (higher consumption favors the boiler install, lower consumption favors keeping district steam). We estimate we can probably get annual consumption down to 33,000 Mlb/year (10% reduction) and also reduce our peak somewhat. I intend on running some different payback scenarios to see how sensitive the payback is to various cost assumptions.
Certainly there are a number of factors to consider beyond payback, but back to my original question, is there guidance out there, similar to this Presidential Memorandum, but applicable to this type of project (non energy conserving)? I'm trying to track down someone at GSA who could have some insight.
Presidential Memorandum -- Implementation of Energy Savings Projects and Performance-Based Contracting for energy savings | The White House (for energy conservation projects, this not being one)-- 10 years or less.
OMB Circular A-94 (discount rate source)