Industrial Energy Efficiency, 19-20 April 2010, Melbourne, Australia
While the world has lesser energy to spare, the need for greater energy efficiency performance becomes increasingly important. The inevitable increase in energy costs has resulted increase in the cost of doing business. Often, energy could account from 2% to 20% in operating cost.
Ability to control energy cost is one of the key competitive advantage company continuously strive for. Achieving energy savings can translate to immediate savings in direct operational cost, which can therefore convert to profits and hence improvement to business financial performance.
Industrial Energy Efficiency Forum aims to attract regional energy efficiency leaders and experts especially from large energy users to meet, discuss and collaborate.
The objective is to encourage near-term adoption of proven practices and technologies and offers resources such as research updates, best practices, software tools and technical information. Industry practitioners are able to set a clear, optimum path to both energy cost control and energy supply security in achieving minimal amount of energy used per product, improve their bottom line hence competitiveness while leading the nation toward a more secure energy future.
Key topics
• Leveraging data to identify areas for energy efficiency improvement
• Establishing metrics to quantify and understand energy use
• Discovering unmet and unarticulated alternative energy efficiency opportunities that require low or no capital investment
• Accurately tracking performance to ensure sustainable energy savings
• Quantifying ROI for energy efficiency investment to justify investment
• Effectively conducting thorough energy efficiency assessment to identify new areas for energy efficiency improvement
• Reviewing energy efficiency potential of your industrial combustion system
• Optimising your compressed air system to achieve 30% savings of compressed air energy consumption
• Discovering opportunites for energy efficiency gains in a motor driven system
• Tapping into energy efficiency potentials through plant audit
• Building capability to manage and store energy data using Energy Management Information System (EMIS)
• Efficiently allocating energy efficiency responsibilities to the right personnel to ensure success
More information
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