Web Based Enterprise Energy and Building Automation Systems
Foreword I Introduction to Web Based Enterprise Energy and Building Automation Systems 1. Introduction to Web Based Enterprise Energy and Building Automation Systems 2. Building Automation Beyond the Simple Web Server 3. What Is an Intelligent Building? 4. How Can a Building Be Intelligent if It Has Nothing to Say? 5. Ten Technology Takeaways for 2006 6. The Business Value of Enterprise Energy Management at DFW Airport II Web Based Enterprise Energy and Facility Management System Case Studies 7. Innovating the Business of Facilities Operations: A Framework for the Next Major Advancement in Facilities Operations 8. An IT Approach to Diagnosing Complex System Interactions 9. How to Automate Strategies That Make Companies Energy Savvy 10. Bringing Building Automation Systems Under Control 11. Enterprise Energy Management System Installation Case Study at a Food Process Plant 12. Ford Compressor Management System Case Study 13. Technology as a Tool for Continuous Improvemen14. A Case Study of the Jefferson Health System’s Enterprise Energy Management System 15. Integrated Energy Management—A Proven Approach to a Successful Energy Management Program III Web Based Enterprise Energy and Facility Management System Applications 16. Automated Commissioning for Lower Cost, Widely Deployed, Building Commissioning of the Future 17. Monitoring Based Commissioning for Facilities What the Experts Say and Case Studies Reveal 19. The Revolution of Internet Enabled OEM Controls 20. Web Based Wireless Controls for Commercial Building Energy Management Building Operators for Digital Monitoring and Control 22. Facility Scheduling Program A Proactive Approach to Facility Management 24. Web Based Information Technology—A Supply Chain for Energy Strategy in Hotel Operations Facility Management Systems in the Entertainment Park Industry 25. How Disney Saves Energy – Hint: It’s Not Magic 26. An Owner’s Approach to Energy Management System Design 27. Using the Web for Energy Data Acquisition and Analysis 28. Disney’s Enterprise Energy Management Systems Demand Response Applications 29. Participation Through Automation: Fully Automated Critical Peak Pricing in Commercial Buildings 30. Industrial Customers Participating in the Deregulated Texas Electric Utility Market Utilizing Dashboards to Integrate Revolutionary Web Based Software Solutions and Enterprise Systems 31. Web Enabled Metering and Controls for Demand Response VI Hardware and Software Tools and Systems for Data Input, Data Processing and Display in Enterprise Systems 32. Wireless Metering – The Untold Story 33. An Energy Manager’s Introduction to Weather Normalization of Utility Bills 34. The Energy and Cost Savings Calculation System for Enterprise Energy Management 35. SCADA and DCS Security Vulnerabilities and Counter Measures for Engineers, Technicians and IT Staff 36. Developing an Energy Information System: An Efficient Methodology Working with the Budget VII Future Opportunities for Web Based Enterprise Energy and Building Automation Systems; and Conclusion 38. My Virtual Value Visions for Building Automation in 2006 39. Cisco Connected Real Estate 40. Final Thoughts and Conclusion
Barney L. Capehart, Ph.D., CEM, is a Professor Emeritus of Industrial and Systems Engineering at the University of Florida in Gainesville, FL. He is the co-author of Guide to Energy Management, 4th Edition, author of the chapter on Energy Management for the Handbook of Industrial Engineering and is co-author of the chapter on Energy Auditing for the Energy Management Handbook, 5th Edition. Lynne C. Capehart, BS, JD, is a consultant in energy policy and energy efficiency, and resides in Gainesville, FL. She is co-author of Florida’s Electric Future: Building Plentiful Supplies on Conservation; the co-author of numerous papers on PURPA and cogeneration policies; and the co-author of numerous papers on commercial and industrial energy efficiency.