Overall Rating | Gold - expired |
---|---|
Overall Score | 72.21 |
Liaison | Brandon Trelstad |
Submission Date | Feb. 28, 2017 |
Executive Letter | Download |
Oregon State University
OP-6: Clean and Renewable Energy
Status | Score | Responsible Party |
---|---|---|
0.06 / 4.00 |
Leticia
Cavazos Sustainability Program Specialist Sustainability Office |
"---"
indicates that no data was submitted for this field
Total energy consumption (all sources, excluding transportation fuels), performance year :
1,150,761.20
MMBtu
Option 1
12,416.18
MMBtu
None
A brief description of on-site renewable electricity generating devices :
OSU has a total of 2.91 megawatts of photovoltaic equipment, mostly at five large ground mounted solar sites throughout the state. Building mounted solar includes the Student Experience Center at 48kW, Hatfield Marine Science Center pole mounted 1.1 kilowatt array, Kelley Engineering Center roof mounted 2.4 kilowatt array and Dixon Recreation Center's kinetic energy system which utilizes 22 pieces of gym equipment and has a total generating capacity of around 2000 watts. The portable system on the OSU Solar Trailer has an 1800 watt solar array with nine Sanyo 200 watt solar modules, a 25 kilowatt hour battery pack and peak inverter output of 7.2kW. The Solar Trailer is grid tied, feeding power back to the grid most of the year when it is not at events or doing other promotional or visibility work. https://www.facebook.com/OSUSolarTrailer/
Since 2013, the five large grid-tied, ground-mounted arrays have been installed on agricultural lands operated by Oregon State University as part of “Solar by Degrees,” a large-scale photovoltaic power program coordinated by the Oregon University System. OSU was the first to install and have operational solar arrays. See the OSU press release: http://oregonstate.edu/ua/ncs/archives/2012/dec/osu-planting-seeds-%E2%80%9Csolar-farm%E2%80%9D-campus-part-ous-program
The five arrays cover more than twelve acres combined. Three are in Corvallis two are at OSU properties elsewhere in the state. The 35th Street site is the largest, at around six acres and 1,435 kilowatts. It can be found west of the Corvallis campus on the Campus Way bike path. The 53rd Street site is 289 kilowatts and is located adjacent to the bike path just east of the Benton County Fairgrounds. The Salmon Disease Lab site, with a capacity of 482 kilowatts, is located adjacent to Trysting Tree golf course just east of the Willamette River, off the main campus.
The two locations outside Corvallis are in Aurora, Oregon and Hermiston, Oregon. In Aurora is the North Willamette Research and Extension Center (NWREC) farm across from Charbonneau Village on Miley Road. The Hermiston Agricultural Research & Extension Center houses OSU's only Eastern Oregon solar location to date. All five sites were developed in partnership with the College of Agricultural Sciences, to which the property is assigned.
Option 2
384
MMBtu
None
A brief description of on-site renewable non-electric energy devices:
An evacuated tube solar hot water system on the Kelley Engineering Center preheats domestic water, supplying approximately 50% of the building's domestic water heating needs. The International Living and Learning Center also has a flat plate collector solar hot water system which is estimated to be able to provide 6,625 gallons of domestic hot water per day, which averages over 50% of the annual hot water use for this building.
Option 3
0
MMBtu
None
A brief description of off-site, institution-catalyzed, renewable electricity generating devices:
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Option 4
3,084.45
MMBtu
A brief description of the RECs, GOs and/or similar renewable energy products, including contract timeframes:
Green-e certified RECs were either made on OSU's behalf or donated by Pacific Power to offset events such as the annual Sustainability Town Hall.
Optional Fields
Additional documentation to support the submission:
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Sierra magazine requests the following information from U.S. institutions that wish to share data with that organization:
Percentage of total electricity use (0-100) | |
Biomass | 1.10 |
Coal | 62.97 |
Geothermal | 0.35 |
Hydro | 8.30 |
Natural gas | 14.72 |
Nuclear | 0 |
Solar photovoltaic | 0.02 |
Wind | 3.61 |
Other (please specify and explain below) | 9.40 |
A brief description of other sources of electricity not specified above:
9.4 % of the Pacific Power grid mix comes from unspecified sources.
Energy used for heating buildings, by source::
Percentage of total energy used to heat buildings (0-100) | |
Biomass | --- |
Coal | --- |
Electricity | 10 |
Fuel oil | --- |
Geothermal | --- |
Natural gas | 90 |
Other (please specify and explain below) | --- |
A brief description of other sources of building heating not specified above:
OSU has a co-generation plant that provides steam heat to the campus from natural gas electricity production and steam waste heat with additional steam production to meet the campus heating load.
Percentage of total energy consumption from clean and renewable sources:
1.38
Data source(s) and notes about the submission:
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The information presented here is self-reported. While AASHE staff review portions of all STARS reports and institutions are welcome to seek additional forms of review, the data in STARS reports are not verified by AASHE. If you believe any of this information is erroneous or inconsistent with credit criteria, please review the process for inquiring about the information reported by an institution or simply email your inquiry to stars@aashe.org.