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Estimating Commercial Clothes Washer Use in California Coin Laundry Stores

Mary Sutter, Equipoise Consulting Inc.
Ted Pope and Erika Walther, Energy Solutions

Keywords

Abstract

The LightWash program, in collaboration with California water utilities, provided rebates for over 8,000 high efficiency “family-sized” commercial clothes washers throughout the state of California from 2002 through 2005. Aside from a small number of studies on a limited number of washers (Tomlinson 1998; Sullivan 2000; Durfree 2001; FEMP 2002; Sullivan 2004), there is a dearth of publicly available information on the actual frequency of use (i.e., “turns per day”) for commercial washers. However, energy impact estimates are directly proportional to how often the washers are used. Since this vital piece of information had the highest degree of uncertainty in the LightWash savings estimate, evaluation resources were focused on metering commercial washers to estimate the average number of turns per day per washer.

In this study, a total of 77 washers across thirteen coin laundry stores in the Pacific Gas and Electric Company service territory were randomly chosen from the 2004/2005 LightWash program participant database. The washers were metered for a two-week period in 2005 using the watts up? Pro data logger. The average number of turns per day was found to be 2.97 ± 0.70 at the 90% confidence level, roughly half of the number presumed by the program for washers in commercial laundromats.

Paper

Download this paper as pdf: 246_12.pdf

Panels of the 2006 ACEEE Summer Study on Energy Efficiency in Buildings

Panel 1. Residential Buildings: Technologies, Design, Performance Analysis, and Building Industry Trends

Panel 2. Residential Buildings: Program Design, Implementation, and Evaluation

Panel 3. Commercial Buildings: Technologies, Design, Performance Analysis, and Building Industry Trends

Panel 4. Commercial Buildings: Program Design, Implementation, and Evaluation

Panel 5. Utility Regulation and Competition: Incentives, Strategies, and Policies

Panel 6. Market Transformation: Designing for Lasting Change

Panel 7. Human and Social Dimensions of Energy Use: Trends and Their Implications

Panel 8. Changing the Climate for Energy Efficiency: Local, National, and International Policy Dimensions

Panel 9. Appliances, Lighting, Information Technologies, Consumer Electronics, and Miscellaneous End Uses

Panel 10. Roundtables and Interactive Sessions: Learning by Doing

Panel 11. Efficient Communities

Panel 12. Energy Conversations

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