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Sector Agricultural
End-use Process Loads
Project Number ET23SWE0067
2023 - 2025
SWE (Statewide Electric ETP)
ACTIVE
This project will explore the market potential and evaluate the impact of smart controls technologies on Controlled Environment Agriculture (CEA), which involves the cultivation and manufacturing of food and floriculture products. The focus is on automated, integrated, and intelligent environmental...
Sector Residential
End-use Whole Building
Project Number ET23SWE0066
2023 - 2025
SWE (Statewide Electric ETP)
ACTIVE
Heat pump space conditioning and water heating can greatly reduce energy consumption compared to existing electric resistance or natural gas combustion options. Requirements for electrical service upgrades add cost and installation delays for customers considering retrofitting heat pumps for space...
Sector Commercial
End-use Process Loads
Project Number ET23SWE0065
2023 - 2025
SWE (Statewide Electric ETP)
ACTIVE
Implementing more efficient electric motors can greatly reduce the amount of energy used, save money, and reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Many new electric motor technologies promise higher efficiency, particularly in variable speed applications. However, end-users are reluctant to switch from...
Sector Residential
End-use Whole Building
Project Number ET23SWE0061
2023 - 2025
SWE (Statewide Electric ETP)
ACTIVE
Smart electrical panels, an emerging product category, can provide a number of energy efficiency and electrification benefits to single family residential buildings. These panels replace or augment typical electrical panels and include monitoring and control capabilities of each individual...
Sector Commercial
End-use Water Heating/DHW/HPWH
Project Number ET23SWE0057
2023 - 2025
SWE (Statewide Electric ETP)
ACTIVE
This project focuses on the electrification of foodservice hot water. The project will conduct a literature review of commercial kitchen hot water research and data and collect primary data of foodservice facility hot water peak and hourly demand. The objective of this project is to provide data to...
Sector Commercial
End-use Process Loads
Project Number ET23SWE0056
2023 - 2025
SWE (Statewide Electric ETP)
ACTIVE
With 40-60 kWh per square foot electric usage intensity (EUI) supermarkets and grocery stores have one of the highest EUIs in the commercial buildings sector. Refrigeration accounts for roughly 50% of the electric energy and furthermore relies largely on Hydrofluorocarbon (HFC) refrigerants with...
Sector Commercial
End-use HVAC
Project Number ET23SWE0054
2023 - 2025
SWE (Statewide Electric ETP)
ACTIVE
The goal of this project is to understand the potential of heat pump rooftop unit (RTU) technology to electrify and decarbonize existing commercial building heating loads. Rooftop units are particularly ripe for market transformation as they are ubiquitous in the commercial sector with decades of...
Sector Cross Cutting
End-use HVAC
Project Number ET23SWE0049
2023 - 2025
SWE (Statewide Electric ETP)
ACTIVE
This project is a demonstration and comparison study between conventional Normalized Metered Energy Consumption (NMEC) analysis and a Measurement & Verification (M&V) method which enhances NMEC with rapid & repeatable interventions. The Enhanced NMEC (E-NMEC) with Rapid Interventions (RI) is...
Sector Residential
End-use HVAC
Project Number ET23SWE0050
2023 - 2025
SWE (Statewide Electric ETP)
ACTIVE
A limiting factor to rapid adoption of air-source heat pumps (ASHPs) for residential retrofit applications is the first costs associated with installing a heat pump system that provides the home’s full heating and cooling loads with direct distribution into all conditioned rooms of the home. This...
Sector Cross Cutting
End-use HVAC
Project Number ET23SWE0045
2023 - 2025
SWE (Statewide Electric ETP)
ACTIVE
This project is a demonstration and comparison study between conventional Normalized Metered Energy Consumption (NMEC) analysis and a Measurement & Verification (M&V) method which enhances NMEC with rapid & repeatable interventions. The Enhanced NMEC (E-NMEC) with Rapid Interventions (RI) is...
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The ETCC is funded in part by ratepayer dollars and the California IOU Emerging Technologies Program, the IOU Codes & Standards Planning & Coordination Subprograms, and the Demand Response Emerging Technologies (DRET) Collaborative programs under the auspices of the California Public Utilities Commission. The municipal portion of this program is funded and administered by Sacramento Municipal Utility District and Los Angeles Department of Water and Power.