The building analytics company WegoWise has just nailed down an agreement to acquire the software company Melon Power, and
the combination promises to help propel millions of buildings into a more energy efficient future, from single family homes
to commercial properties. The new acquisition will provide more building owners with a simple, user-friendly platform for
analyzing the energy use of their property, enabling them to target their energy efficiency investments where they will get
the most bang for the buck.
The effort is also significant on a national level, because buildings account for 40 percent of the energy used in the U.S.
at a cost of more than $400 billion annually according to the Department of Energy. At that scale, achieving more energy
efficient buildings is basically the equivalent of finding new domestic sources of oil, gas or coal, but without the
environmental hazards.
More energy efficient buildings
According to WegoWise, an inefficient building typically pays about four times more in utility costs than an efficient
building. When retrofitted, the savings can be enormous.
The Empire State Building’s recent energy efficient makeover is a good example of the potential payback at the top end of
the scale. By replacing thousands of old windows among other improvements, the retrofits have saved $2.4 million in their
first year alone. Additional improvements are in store that will achieve a total of $4.4 million in annual savings.
That’s an extreme example, but no matter what their size buildings all face the same challenge when it comes to energy
efficiency retrofits, and that is to achieve the greatest savings at the lowest cost. New energy efficiency strategies and
cutting-edge technologies are exciting, but with so many new choices it becomes more difficult for building managers to
decide which investments are the wisest.
That’s where WegoWise and Melon Power come in, but to see exactly how, it’s helpful to look at them in the broader context
of national energy policy.
Better Buildings, WegoWise and Melon Power
In order to accelerate the transition to more energy efficient buildings, last year President Obama launched the Better
Buildings Initiative. At its core, it is a suite of technology driven improvements, including the Green Button program.
Green Button is, literally, a green button icon. When fully realized, the Green Button program will enable any electricity
customer, anywhere in the U.S., to access data about their energy use online in a standard format.
The only thing that’s missing is applications, including mobile apps, that enable you to combine that data with other
information, and put it to use for saving energy. That’s where WegoWise and Melon Power come in.
Utility companies could design their own apps, but the Green Button program is also designed as an economic accelerator, to
create new jobs by motivating the startup of new software companies and new partnerships. Green Button essentially creates a
single, unified national market for new software.
WegoWise already has a track record in building performance analytics, and Melon Power has already developed an award-winning
Green Button app, so the combination of the two is a natural. Melon Power founder Craig Isakow has also come on board at
WegoWise as part ot the agreement.
Knowledge is (saving) power
The first step to saving energy is to get some idea of where you are and where you could go. Melon Power’s award-winning app
uses data in the Green Button format to help building managers generate an Energy Star benchmark.
The app also enables managers to compare their building’s energy use with other similar properties in the same area, and
spot opportunities for improvement.
Melon Power fills the wide chasm that separates smaller properties with limited resources from correcting inefficient
practices and infrastructure. It does all the grunt work in terms of data collection and management, and identifies areas
with the most potential for rapid payback.
That will be combined with WegoWise’s formidable database. Apparently the largest multifamily utility database in the world,
WegoWise includes almost 11,000 buildings in the U.S. and Canada.
WegoWise has also formed partnerships with the U.S. Green Buildings Council and the Green and Healthy Homes Initiative,
enabling it to extend its services to single family homes.
摘自http://www.triplepundit.com/2012/12/energy-efficient-building-wegowise-melon-power-answer/)>http://www.triplepundit.com/2012/12/energy-efficient-building-wegowise-melon-power-answer/