Abstract
In 2000, the Corning glass plant in Greenville, Ohio, consumed almost 114 million kWh of electricity and nearly 308,000 MMBtu of natural gas in its glassmaking processes for a total cost of approximately $6.4 million. A plant-wide assessment indicated that improvement projects could save nearly $26 million and reduce natural gas use by 122,900 MMBtu per year, reduce electrical use by 72,300,000kWh per year, and reduce CO2 emissions by 180 million pounds per year.
Original language | American English |
---|---|
Number of pages | 4 |
State | Published - 2004 |
NREL Publication Number
- NREL/BR-840-33895
Other Report Number
- DOE/GO-102004-1721
Keywords
- air compressors
- case study
- Corning
- equipment
- gas-fired boilers
- glass
- glassmaking
- industrial energy efficiency
- lighting
- motor drive systems
- New York
- plant-wide assessments
- process heating
- vacuum pumps