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AGENDA
(Archived event)
Click on the presentation title or presenters name to view the
presentation slides. Not all presenters made slides
available. Some presentation files are large and may take a few
minutes to open. Presentations are provided in PDF format, which
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Wednesday, October
21, 2009
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10:00 am
– 12 noon |
Optional
Pre-Conference Workshops presented by Sponsors
· Presented
by Western Area Power Administration for Western customers only:
Introduction to Western's
Online IRP Reporting System
Linda Swails, Energy
Services Manager, Western Area Power Administration
All Western customers are
required to do IRPs and to report every year. Some customers rely on
other utilities to submit an IRP for them but for all that submit their
own IRP, this class will be very helpful.
· Sponsored
by Electric & Gas Industries Association session and open to all
attendees:
What Utilities Need to Know
About Working with Home Improvement Contractors
Bruce Matulich and David
Warren, EGIA
Discover what goes into
establishing and maintaining a network of contractors to refer to home
and business owners for energy efficiency and renewable energy
improvements |
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12 noon - 1:00 pm |
Lunch Buffet and Meet the Sponsors in Meadows Restaurant
Hot buffet
lunch with opportunity to meet in small groups with representatives from the
sponsor organizations |
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1:00 pm
– 1:15 pm |
Welcoming Remarks
by Jeff Rice,
City of Aspen Utilities |
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1:15 pm
– 1:45 pm |
Opening Keynote:
Navigating the New DSM
Frontier
Jeffrey Ackermann, Advisor to the
Commissioners, Demand-Side Management, Colorado Public
Utilities Commission
Carbon dioxide reduction goals,
climate action plans, federal and state efficiency standards (to name a few)
have promised to deliver a ton of energy savings and reduce our carbon footprint
well into the future. As we know, our current and new DSM efforts will be relied
upon to help reach these higher goals for our state, region, or utility
portfolios. Jeff will help us navigate our way through this new world of DSM and
delve into some of the planning and operational issues that are on the horizon.
What it will take to push DSM beyond our current levels?
Focus on
Utility Program Portfolio session
Session
Co-Chairs: Jeff Rice, City of Aspen Utilities and Peter Narog, Xcel Energy
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1:45 pm - 2:15 pm |
Utility Program Snap Shots
Five-minute highlights of utility program
activities with focus on program portfolios for 2009 and 2010,
presented by the session co-chairs and other participants
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2:15 pm - 2:45 pm |
Xcel Energy Overview of 2009/2010
Programs (And Lessons Learned So Far)
Peter Narog, Manager, Consumer Energy Efficiency Marketing, Xcel
Energy
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2:45 pm - 3:15 pm |
Excess is Out 2009/2010
Program Collaborative
Paul Smith, Manager, Demand Side Management, SourceGas
Collaborative between SourceGas, Atmos Energy, Colorado Natural Gas, and
Eastern Colorado Utilities
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3:15 pm - 3:30 pm |
Refreshment Break |
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3:30 pm - 4:00 pm |
Achieving Aggressive
Efficiency Goals
John Phelan, Energy Services/DSM, Fort Collins Utilities
Plans and strategies to achieve The City of Fort Collins’ aggressive
energy efficiency goals of 1.5% reduction of energy use per year as part
of an overall climate action plan to reduce CO2 citywide. Achieving 1.5%
reduction in energy use through energy efficiency per year is a huge
goal and is well beyond most utility energy efficiency program goals in
the country |
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4:00 pm -
4:30 pm |
Black Hills Energy Program Portfolio
Overview
Matt Daunis, Director, Energy
Efficiency, Black Hills Energy
Case study on how a
customer-focused marketing campaign effectively supports the
implementation of a comprehensive and extensive energy efficiency
marketing and communications program, capitalizing on the results of
benchmarking studies and customer profiles, to effectively reflect
customer values and needs and encouraging them to participate in
residential energy efficiency programs.
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4:30 pm - 5:00 pm |
Roaring Fork Valley Utility Collaborative
Jeff Rice, Utilities Energy
Efficiency Manager, City of Aspen
Collaborative between City of Aspen Utilities, Holy
Cross Electric Cooperative, City of Glenwood Springs and CORE |
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5:00 pm - 6:30 pm
CLICK HERE
for more details about poster sessions |

Networking Reception and Poster Session hosted by Staples and Associates
Hosted bar and hors d’oeurves among
the sponsor displays and posters on topics related to utility-sponsored program
design, implementation and design.
| Poster Topics (CLICK
HERE for detailed descriptions of these winning
poster topics)
- Lowering Costs Through
Resource Pooling Between Load Serving Entities
Nils E. Tellier, P.E.;
Robertson-Bryan, Inc.
- Savings That Add Up! School-based programs.
Dave Munk, Resource Action
Programs
- Your Website is Your Most Valuable Employee!
Tom DuBos, Apogee Interactive
- Reaching Time-Constrained Small Business Customers
Kevin McKinnon, Franklin Energy
Services
- Action-oriented Conservation at United Power
Tom Potter, Southwest Energy
Efficiency Project
- CityCarbon.com: A Geospatial and Building Performance Platform
Val Leitner, International
Carbon Bank and Exchange (ICBE)
- Energy
Services’ Equipment Loan Program Presents: The Great Refrigerator
Robbery
Kevon Storie, Western Area
Power Administration
- Gary The Energy Guy, a successful member education program
Gary R. Myers, Poudre Valley
Rural Electric Association
- Excess is Out Joint Rebate Administration
Bruce Matulich,
EGIA
- Golf Courses Need Efficiency Programs, too
Andrew Staples,
Golf Resource Group
- Green Switch: Innovative Energy Savings Products
Andy Gillis,
ENERGYWISE |
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Thursday, October
22, 2009
______________________________________________________________________
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7:30 pm - 8:30 am |
Breakfast Buffet in Meadows Restaurant
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8:30 am - 5:00 pm |
Two Concurrent Session
Tracks will be presenter throughout Thursday morning and afternoon
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Focus on Residential Energy Efficiency
Session Chairs: Linda
Swails, Western Area Power Administration and Steve Casey, Holy Cross
Energy |
Focus on
Commercial Energy Efficiency
Session Chairs: Adam Perry, Platte River Power Authority and Matt
Daunis, Black Hills Energy
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8:30 am - 9:00 am
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Utility Residential Program Snap Shots
Five-minute highlights of utility program activities presented by the
session co-chairs and other participants |
Utility Commercial Program Snap Shots
Five-minute highlights of utility program activities presented by the
session co-chairs and other participants |
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9:00 a.m. – 10:00 am |
Home Energy Audit Program
Implementation Strategies
• Paul Kriescher, Lightly Treading Energy & Design with Peter
Narog, Xcel Energy
• Steve Byers, EnergyLogic, with Paul Smith, SourceGas
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Tom Dubos, Apogee Interactive
Panel discussion with program implementation companies delivering
comprehensive in-home energy analysis with improvement installations in
the service territories of Xcel Energy, SourceGas, and elsewhere. |
Business Energy Audit Program
Implementation Strategies
• Kevin Afflerbaugh, City of Boulder (City of Bolder ClimateSmart)
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Susannah Pedigo, Xcel Energy
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Julie Sieving, The Brendle Group
Panel discussion with
program implementation companies delivering commercial energy analysis
with improvement installations.
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10:00 am - 10:30 am |
Refreshment break |
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10:30 am - 11:00
am |
Developing
and Adopting
Inverted Tiered Utility (Electric, Water, etc.)
Rates
Todd Cristiano, Redoak Consulting
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One
Size Doesn’t Fit All
Greg Stiles, Senior Business Sector Manager, Energy Trust of Oregon
Learn about the Energy Trust of Oregon, Inc approach to electric and natural gas
energy efficiency and renewable energy demand side programs. Discover how
instead of "one size fits all programs" Energy Trust provides target
specific programs to meet the needs of dry cleaners, auto services, foodservice,
lodging, data centers and more. The targeted approach has allowed Energy Trust
commercial programs to double energy savings year over year in 2007 and 2008.
Energy Trust's foodservice program has been awarded an ENERGY STAR Partner of
the Year award in 2007 and 2008. Energy Trust's lodging program was recognized
by the Oregon Lodging Association as the Industry Partner of Year for 2008. As
of 2008, the annual utility bill savings to customers stemming from
participation in Energy Trust programs is estimated at $144 million per year.
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11:00 am -
11:30 am |
How to Plan and Implement a Successful Water Heater Efficiency Promotion
John Richards, Northwest Region Manager, Rheem/Special Products Division
Insight from programs by two Oregon utilities, one private (Portland General
Electric) and one public, (Eugene Water & Electric Board). Discover
what they did and how they did it.
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Extreme Office Makeover
Mira Vowles, Bonneville Power Administration
Learn how a program initiated by the New York
Research and Development Authority was applied by Bonneville Power
Authority in two private office buildings with multiple tenants, using
student interns. Also,
discover what’s new in rooftop unit retro-commissioning.
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11:30 am - 12:00 pm |
Electric Space Heating Innovations
Jean-Marie Falquet,
Convectair What happens when you
replace baseboards with better electric heaters ? Learn the results of
a case study from a pilot program at Wright-Hennepin co-operative in
Minnesota. Also, learn about a residential energy management solution
that can be used to shed load during critical peak demand events. |
Multi-family Housing
Efficiency Programs
Lynn Stein and Kelsie Bell, Research Associate, E Source
Participation in energy-efficiency programs
by multifamily properties is low due to split incentives between the
property manager and tenant. To further complicate things,
utilities often have a hard time deciding whether to treat these
properties as commercial accounts or residential. There are
effective ways to get around these and other barriers to engage this
hard-to-reach community. We will cover barriers such as education and
lack of capital, marketing to property managers, leveraging partners,
and lessons learned from successful utility programs. |
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12:00 pm - 1:00 pm |
Lunch Buffet and
Roundtable Discussion at Meadows Restaurant |
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Focus on Customer
Service and Marketing Energy Efficiency
Session Chairs: Joani Matranga, Colorado Governor's Energy Office |
Focus on Renewable Energy and Carbon Reduction Initiatives
Session Chairs: Ron Horstman, Western Area Power Administration
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1:00 pm - 1:30 pm |
Utility Customer Service
and Marketing Program Snap Shots
Five-minute highlights of utility program activities presented by the
session co-chairs and other participants |
Environmental Program
Snap Shots
Five-minute highlights of utility program activities presented by the
session co-chairs and other participants |
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1:30 pm - 2:00 pm |
Integrating Social Marketing with Energy
Efficiency
Michael Volker, Director of
Regulatory and Energy Services with Midwest Energy, Inc with Nancy
Jackson, Executive Director of the Climate and Energy Project
Insight on how the Climate and Energy
Project’s Take Charge Challenge - a friendly competition in six Kansas
communities to determine which community can conserve the most energy –
leveraged Midwest Energy’s How$mart program to win the challenge in two
Midwest Energy communities. Kinsley, Kansas (pop 1,500), one of
Midwest's Take Charge communities, has 50 How$mart Conservation Plans
completed in homes or commercial buildings already. This is before the
year-long Challenge has even officially kicked off!
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How to Leverage Utility
DSM Efforts with Cities’ Climate Goals
Susan Pascoe, Assistant Manager, Efficiency and Business Market
Services, E Source
The U.S. Mayor’s Climate Protection Agreement states that 944 mayors
from all 50 states, plus the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico have
voluntarily agreed to meet or exceed the targets for reducing the
pollutants that contribute to global warming set in the Kyoto Protocol.
The list of actions includes making energy efficiency a priority.
Utilities have conducted energy efficiency programs for many years. This
experience can be an asset that may assist a city in meeting the
reductions outlined in Kyoto. Fort Collins and Aspen have made specific
efforts to integrate their cities’ climate goals with carbon reduction
efforts through energy efficiency and conservation programs at their
municipal utilities. For instance, Fort Collins City Council passed a
“Local Action Plan to Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions.” In turn, Fort
Collins Utilities (FCU) created the Climate Wise program specifically to
help meet some of the greenhouse gas reduction goals. The strategies
employed by FCU, as well as Aspen, may point a way forward that may
benefit us all. This presentation will contain case studies of the
efforts at these utilities. It will also illustrate key lessons learned
and it will highlight coordination tips that may be used by other
utilities to help the municipalities they service meet their climate
targets while extending their own energy efficiency and conservation
efforts.
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2:00 pm - 2:30 pm |
Ramping Up Your Rebate
Programs: Key Success Factors
Lauren Casentini, Resource Solutions Group and Bruce Matulich, EGIA
Paying utility customers a modest sum to
upgrade their energy efficient equipment is often the most direct way to
nudge folks toward higher efficiency systems while closely tracking
program effectiveness. Discover how innovative utilities are partnering
to jointly promote and administer residential energy efficiency rebate
programs in Colorado and elsewhere. |
Green Collar Workforce
Development
Larry Zarker, Building Performance Institute
The U.S. Department of Labor, labor organizations, and others realize
the career-building potential and economic impact of a green collar
workforce. However, enforcement of industry and program standards is
vital to ensure the potential to deliver true energy savings. EPA, DOE
and HUD provided initial funding to form the Building Performance
Institute to minimize program sponsor liability with independent,
third-party quality assurance. Learn how BPI benchmarks standards and
raises the performance bar for technicians and the companies that employ
them.
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2:30 pm - 3:00 pm |
Innovative Marketing Tactics of Leading
Home Performance Contractors
Ed Thomas, UtilityExchange.org
Results from a survey of the marketing tactics of 15 home performance
contractors nationwide. Learn low-cost, innovative
marketing tactics from HVAC, insulation, and solar installation
companies that have repositioned themselves to become leading-edge home
performance contractors. Selling “whole house solutions” that address
energy savings, comfort and health/safety is more complex than selling
furnace replacements. But the result is larger jobs with higher profit
margins that significantly set companies apart from traditional home
improvement contractor competition.
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REEP and Its Impact on Utilities
Stephen Michael Self, Sustainable Interiors on behalf of Efficiency
First
Efficiency First is working on key federal incentives through the
Retrofit for Energy and Environmental Performance (REEP) legislation and
bridge funding that will help spur demand for home performance upgrades.
Learn how REEP will significantly alter consumer demand, spurring
utilities to re-examine their own programs and look deeper into
contractor qualifications, quality assurance on the work that the
utilities perform, and require verification of energy savings achieved.
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3:00 pm - 3:30 pm |
Refreshment Break |
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3:30 pm - 4:00 pm |
Marketing Property Tax
Bill Financing
Ann Livingston, Sustainability Coordinator, Boulder County
This year Boulder County launched its nationally groundbreaking
ClimateSmart Loan Program establishing $40 million in loans for
residential energy efficiency and renewable energy measures. The
ClimateSmart Loan Program provides a voluntary mechanism for commercial
and residential property owners to obtain financing for renewable energy
and/or energy efficiency improvements to properties in Boulder County.
This innovative program is the first countywide financing mechanism for
renewable energy and energy efficiency in the United States with
multi-jurisdictional support from ten municipalities. The ClimateSmart
Loan Program not only offers affordable financing for county residents
and business owners wishing to implement energy improvements to their
properties, but it will also help reduce Boulder County’s overall
greenhouse gas emissions, a major goal of Boulder County’s Sustainable
Energy Plan and long-term goal of carbon neutrality."
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Solar Water Heating
Impacts for Colorado Utilities
Joe Bourg, President, Millennium Energy
Learn about solar water heating projects conducted for
National Rural Electric Cooperatives Association, Colorado Governor's
Energy Office, and United Power with Tri-State Generation &
Transmission Association.
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4:00 pm - 4:30 pm |
How Energy Efficiency
Improves Customer Satisfaction
Kim Gaddy, Product Strategy Manager, Vertex Business Services
Understand the linkage between energy efficiency programs and customer
satisfaction. Perception of energy efficiency programs, or lack thereof,
will impact customer satisfaction. Customers expect their utility to
provide actionable information to help them manage energy usage and
reduce utility costs. Regulators also look to utilities to encourage
alignment of consumption and supply. They are becoming more pro-active
and seek to enable energy efficiency. Effective programs that satisfy
customers and regulators include three primary components: - Awareness;
- Actionable information; - Appropriate incentives. The benefits energy
efficiency programs deliver go well beyond the expected economic and
environmental benefits and extend to stakeholder satisfaction. These
programs create the opportunity to redefine relationships with
regulators and customers." |
Energy Planning: The New
Role For Utilities To Help America Achieve Energy Independence
Herb Rubenstein, President, Sustainable Business Group
There are multiple obstacles facing utilities today that affect how they
do business. Utilities are being asked to play a larger and more
consistent role in helping develop, implement, evaluate, and improve
energy policy and energy related programs in America to help achieve
energy independence. There is a need to focus on both short-term and
long-term planning. This approach will help ensure that the steps taken
today and in the future are properly coordinated and tracked to promote
citizen involvement, energy conservation and efficiency, diversification
of energy resource availability, proper support for research and
development in new energy technologies, coordination of energy
investment so economic development activities, and city, county, state,
and national activities, our educational activities and the average
citizen are all doing what is necessary to achieve energy independence.
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4:30 pm - 5:00 pm |
Home Energy Use Display Monitors
Lynn Stein, Senior Advisor, E Source
Finally, people are interested how much energy
they’re using and what it costs! In this session, learn about the new
products for getting that information in front of your customers. Many
utilities are running pilot programs. Find out what their results are,
as well as lessons they’ve learned along the way. We’ll also discuss
considerations when launching your own program, including goals,
participant and technology selection, and integration with AMI or
SmartGrid. |
The Importance of Integrating Demand
Response with Smart Meters
Tom Van Denover, Vice President of Sales, Comverge,
Inc.
Advanced Metering Infrastructure (AMI) is being investigated by
all sizes of utilities as the modern way to communicate and service the
utility customer. The AMI network itself has many cost-saving benefits,
but for many, it is the integration of AMI with Demand Response (DR) and
those added DR benefits that pave the way for a positive, compelling
business case for AMI. And on the technology side, the Smart Energy
Profile is changing the way many utilities think about serving the
customer in the home.
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5:00 pm |
Adjourn |
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6:00 pm – 7:00 pm |
Hosted Bar at Double Dog Pub
305
E. Hopkins Ave.
in downtown Aspen
Show your name badge and get free drinks in this notable hotspot with a
dog theme.
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Friday, October 23, 2009
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7:30
am - 8:30 am
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Breakfast Buffet in Meadows Restaurant
Focus on Program Integration
Sessions
Co-Chairs: Paul Smith, SourceGas and Bill Ewer, City of Longmont
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8:30 am - 9:00 am |
Closing Keynote:
The Colorado Governor's
Energy Office Planning Horizon
Matt Futch, Utilities Program Manager, Colorado Governor's
Energy Office
Insight on where the GEO's planning efforts are focused in regards
to energy efficiency and demand-side management initiatives over the
next few years. |
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9:00 am – 9:30
am |
Utility Program Snap Shots
Five-minute highlights of utility program activities with a focus on
changes on the horizon |
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9:30 am - 10:00 am |
Emerging Technology
Update: The Carbon City
Sustainability Information Management System – New Opportunities for
DSM Targeting and Tracking
Tim Hillman, Symbiotic Engineering
Learn how utilities and local governments in Colorado are
using the Carbon City Sustainability Information Management System
to expand their ability to analyze, micro-target and evaluate their
energy efficiency and greenhouse gas reduction strategies and to
increase the effectiveness of their demand side management programs.
in order to:
- Produce a map that shows the energy use or energy use intensity patterns
of any subset of residential or commercial customers, and then
generate a list of properties that meet some threshold of
consumption or use intensity
- Get assistance tracking the weather normalized energy use changes for
any customers who have participated in one of your DSM programs
- Give customers access to a web portal where they can not only access
their utility billing data, but also compare their energy use to
similar homes or businesses, and even join a group of their peers to
compete against others to see who can achieve the greatest savings
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10:00 am - 10:30 am |
Refreshment break |
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10:30 am – 11:00 am |
Best Practices for
Cost-Effective Program Evaluations
Katherine Johnson, President, Johnson Consulting Group
Best practices and lessons learned from program evaluations conducted for 12
small municipal as well as rural electric utilities in California, Colorado,
Kansas and Missouri. This presentation will provide attendees with other
cost-effective evaluation strategies used by Midwest Energy, Delta-Montrose
Electric Association, Missouri Gas Energy and 12 California utilities
including City of Palo Alto, City of Lodi, and Silicon Valley Power. The
utilities participating in these evaluations were diverse: some had 500
customers, while others served communities of 300,000. However, the
strategies used are flexible enough to meet these diverse needs without
causing undue financial hardships.
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11:00 am – 11:30 am |
Late-Breaking
News
Larry Zarker, CEO, Building Performance Institute |
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11:30 am - 12
noon |
Closing Remarks
Jeff Rice, City of Aspen Utilities |
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12:00 noon |
Conference
Adjourns
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