Why Should Businesses in Utah Care About Energy Efficiency?
Businesses have many things to worry about—producing valued goods and
services, satisfying customers, competing in an increasingly global marketplace,
maintaining employee morale, and generating a profit, to name a few. On top of
this, for most businesses the cost of energy is a relatively small fraction of
the total cost of doing business. So why should a business pay attention to its
energy use and potential to reduce energy use by increasing energy efficiency?
The main reason is that it makes good business sense. Virtually every
business is using more energy than it needs to for its operations—for running
assembly lines, fueling industrial processes, heating, cooling, and lighting.
Many businesses use 20-50% more energy than they need to, as shown in the case
studies in this Guide. Cutting this energy waste by investing in more efficient
equipment is one of the most cost-effective investments a business can make—the
rate of return on this investment is often 30% or greater—and returns are tax-free.
In short, investing in energy efficiency will increase a business’s profits.
Conversely, continuing to operate with high levels of energy waste and excessive
energy costs will reduce profits and put a business at a disadvantage when
compared to more energy-efficient competitors.
Increasing energy efficiency provides other benefits besides energy cost
savings. Energy-efficient lighting, heating, and air conditioning often improve
worker comfort and productivity as well as save energy. Industrial process
improvements can cut material use, improve product quality, or increase output,
as well as save energy. These non-energy benefits in some cases are worth more
than the energy bill savings, raising the annual return on investment to 50% or
more.
Last but not least, energy efficiency improvements provide benefits to
society as well as to the company making them. Increasing energy efficiency
means less fuel is consumed either on-site or by power plants, thereby reducing
pollutant emissions and water consumption. Increasing efficiency also lowers
energy demand growth, meaning less risk of power outages, less need for costly
and controversial new power plants and transmission lines, and less depletion of
finite energy resources. In short, energy-efficient businesses are better
corporate citizens than those that waste large amounts of energy.
Every business, large or small, should have a strategy for identifying and
making cost-effective energy efficiency improvements. This guide is meant to
help businesses in Utah recognize what they can do to increase their energy
efficiency—and where they can go for help.
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