Top-down Energy Modeling

Authors

  • Yeager Vogt PE, CEM, MBA Principal Consultant Xander Corp.

Abstract

There are two fundamental approaches to modeling a facility’s
energy consumption: top-down and bottom-up. The bottom-up model
requires metering installation and an exhaustive inventory of all facility
equipment, as well as the energy consumption pattern of each facility
device. To determine a facility’s total energy consumption over any
period of time, it’s only necessary to sum the energy consumption of all
the facility’s equipment.
The top-down model uses the high-level information that a facility
routinely collects regarding its activities and performance, and associ-
ates that data with the corresponding energy consumption.
The purpose of this article is to discuss the advantages and disad-
vantages of each modeling technique, with the result that the top-down
model is preferred on the basis of cost, time, construction, model opera-
tion, model maintenance effort, accuracy, etc.

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Author Biography

Yeager Vogt, PE, CEM, MBA Principal Consultant Xander Corp.

Yeager Vogt, PE, CEM, MBA, principal consultant at Xander Corp. doing business in Arkansas and Louisiana in utility consulting, fuels, cogeneration, and energy efficiency. Contact at www.xandercorp.com, email at xander@aristotle.net, or (501) 228-9565.

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Published

2023-07-11

How to Cite

Vogt, Y. . (2023). Top-down Energy Modeling. Strategic Planning for Energy and the Environment, 24(1), 66–80. Retrieved from https://journals.riverpublishers.com/index.php/SPEE/article/view/20175

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Articles