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Energy Department, Northwest Food Processors Association Set Energy Efficiency Goals for Industry
PORTLAND, OR - The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and the Northwest Food
Processors Association today set ambitious goals to reduce energy use and carbon
emissions in the industrial sector. DOE Industrial Technologies Program Manager
Douglas Kaempf and Northwest Food Processors Association (NWFPA) President David
Zepponi signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) announcing an industry-wide
target of reducing energy intensity (energy use per unit of output) by 25
percent over the next ten years. This aggressive goal demonstrates the continued
leadership of the Northwest region and the possibilities that exist throughout
the country to reduce carbon emissions, improve American global competitiveness,
protect jobs, and strengthen the domestic manufacturing sector.
“The Northwest Food Processors show tremendous foresight by making this
significant dedication to improve efficiency,” said Kaempf. “The ability to do
more with less is fundamental to bolstering our economy and creating a
sustainable future for U.S. manufacturers.”
The MOU develops a framework to pursue a diverse range of opportunities for
energy efficiency within the food processing industry and all manufacturers in
the region. The signing took place at the Northwest Industrial Energy Efficiency
Summit, a day-long event including participants from Washington, Oregon, Idaho,
and Montana. Representatives from industry, government, utilities, and
supporting organizations in these states were invited to provide specific ideas
on how to deal most effectively with the rising costs of energy, the need to
limit carbon emissions, ways to spur industrial growth, and how to stabilize
employment in the Northwest manufacturing sector.
As an extension of DOE’s support, the MOU was also signed by Steven J.
Wright, Administrator of Bonneville Power Administration (BPA), DOE Office of
Science Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) Director Michael Kluse, and
DOE’s Office of Nuclear Energy Idaho National Laboratory (INL) Deputy Laboratory
Director David Hill. DOE, BPA, both laboratories, the Northwest Energy
Efficiency Alliance, and other regional organizations will help NWFPA meet their
goal by working to deliver advanced, safe, and clean energy technologies.
The MOU directly supports Save Energy Now, DOE’s national initiative to
promote and support reductions in industrial energy intensity and carbon
emissions throughout the United States. Save Energy Now
energy assessments have
helped U.S. manufacturing facilities save an average of 8% of their total energy
costs. Plants across the country can begin the process of reducing energy
intensity by applying for a no-cost energy assessment performed by a DOE
Energy
Expert or DOE’s university-based Industrial Assessment Centers. The MOU
demonstrates DOE’s continued assistance to the Nation’s manufacturers and
industrial producers in improving their energy efficiency through innovative
partnerships with national associations, state and local government agencies,
non-profit organizations, and their related supply chains. To date, the Save
Energy Now industrial assessments across the country have identified more than
$1 billion in potential energy savings.
-DOE-
Editorial Date February 17, 2009
By Bradley Bugger
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