Case Study
Rolls Royce & Bentley Motor Company speeds ahead with energy management to offset the Climate Change Levy.
Many manufacturers and heavy energy users see the introduction of the Climate Change Levy on April 1st, 2001 as simply another punitive tax to hamper production and business. Ian Baker, Rolls Royce & Bentley's Environment Management Representative feels that the Climate Change Levy is a challenge. "It will mean taking measures to counteract the increased bills." He agreed, "But it is vital in environmental terms to reduce energy consumption."
DETR's Agreements
Rolls Royce & Bentley Motor Cars is a member of the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT) and, as such, is part of the first wave of the DETR's Sectorial Agreements to obtain relief from the Climate Change Levy in certain high energy processes. The SMMT agreement is to reduce energy consumption by 12% by 2010, based on a 1995 baseline. This further reduction is never an easy task as most plants are already aware of minimising energy wastage.
£500m Investment
The Rolls Royce & Bentley plant in Crewe, Cheshire started
production of Motor Cars in 1946. It now covers 60 acres and
employs 2,500 personnel on a full time basis. The site now
includes Design & Development and Sales & Marketing
as well as Manufacturing facilities and is currently undergoing
major refurbishment since its acquisition by the Volkswagen
Group in 1998 and the subsequent £500 million investment
programme embarked on.
Energy Conservation
Within the facility changes, energy conservation measures feature prominently with the introduction of energy efficient roofing materials, space heating units and lighting. Overall this will mean extending the current 98 data channels, which use Stark RT software to collect data, up to 150 and ensure Rolls-Royce & Bentley Motor Cars move away from using apportionment models to measure specific energy usage in key areas, particularly those covered by the Sectorial Agreement.
Chose Stark RT
Twelve months ago Ian Baker chose Stark RT as Rolls Royce
& Bentley's energy management tool. "Until then I had
been spending every Saturday morning with an Excel spreadsheet!"
he commented. After an initial period of configuration which
Stark and Ian Baker worked through together, an interesting
picture of energy usage began to emerge. Ian Baker was already
aware of the costs per hour of the plant running at full capacity
and which areas should be using little or no energy at certain
times of the day. When the new metering and monitoring was
in place, together with the excellent graphical and interpretive
facilities which Stark gives, it was relatively easy to identify
anomalies in usage trends to the appropriate high user areas
thus enabling Rolls-Royce & Bentley Motor Cars to record
the lowest units of energy used per car manufactured for several
years. |