Albertsons Nets 1 Billion Kilowatt
Hours
Source:
nw current
Boise-based grocery chain Albertsons says it has saved about 1
billion kilowatt hours of electricity since 2000 by continually
improving new store designs and aggressively retrofitting old ones. Now
being purchased for $17.4 billion by Supervalu Inc., CVS Corp. and an
investor group, Albertsons' long-term efforts toward energy efficiency
are less certain. By Linda Anderson
When Hurricane Katrina pummeled the Gulf Coast, grocery chain
Albertsons, like other businesses around the country, knew skyrocketing
energy bills would soon follow. To prepare for the sticker shock, it
tightened its corporate belt.
"We immediately reduced lighting and assigned an energy captain to each
store to look for energy waste," said Scott Moore, Albertsons' director
of energy management and procurement in Boise. "These people educate
employees on better ways to operate and become more aware of energy
waste."
Employees and those who keep tabs on the Boise-based grocery chain were
not surprised by the company's actions. Moore said since late 1999
Albertsons has aggressively sought to use less energy and operate in a
more environmentally friendly fashion.
On Jan. 23, Albertsons announced it is being purchased for $17.4 billion
by Minneapolis, Minn.-based Supervalu Inc., drug store chain CVS Corp.
and a New York-based investor group. The Albertson name is expected to
remain if the deal is finalized in mid-2006, but the long-term impact on
the grocer's energy-efficiency efforts remains to be seen.
The company has saved about 1 billion kilowatt hours of electricity
since 2000 by building more efficient stores and retrofitting older
stores, Moore said. It has completed 5,000 separate improvement
projects, such as installing energy management systems that control
heating, cooling, indoor and outdoor lighting, refrigeration systems,
and hot water tanks.
"We have 240,000 employees and probably every one of them has taken
ownership of this idea," said Shannon Bennett, an Albertsons
spokeswoman. “It's not just Scott's team. The entire company has
embraced the idea of conservation.”
And it was meant to be more than a passing fancy.
“We've designed this to be a continuous process-improvement program, not
something you do and then you’re done,” Moore said. “You get done
upgrading something and there’s some new technology you can apply
again.”
The chain’s aggressive retrofit program includes upgrading indoor
lighting to T8 fluorescent lamps, installing motion sensors on lights
and adding miser controls on vending machines. The company has installed
frozen food cases with anti-condensate heater controls in the glass
doors. It has also installed more efficient lighting in its distribution
centers and offices.
On new construction projects, Moore works with a group of internal
stakeholders, including operations, finance and architecture.
“We have a corporate energy strategy that reaches into all parts of the
company, from purchasing to the store level,” he said.
For new stores, the company developed a model store with specific design
criteria -- a model that can be duplicated throughout the country. The
design is constantly adapted to incorporate new technologies, Moore
said.
In 2000, Christopher Meek of the Seattle BetterBricks Lighting Design
Lab worked with the company on lighting designs for its then-current
criteria store. He said the goal was to develop a skylight design layout
that provided at least half of the store’s lighting (averaged during the
year) with daylighting.
“You can’t provide daylighting deep into a space like that because of
shelves,” he explained. “The only real strategy for daylight is through
skylights.”
Meek said the lab anticipated that, with skylights and energy-efficient
strip fluorescents, Albertsons would save 50% on its lighting costs in
the central sales floor area.
The grocer continues to test various new lighting technologies,
according to Moore. It is pilot testing LED (light-emitting diode)
technology and fiberoptics in Idaho and California, and it is also
working with Southern California Edison’s Lighting Technology Center in
Irwindale, Calif.
In Worcester, Mass., a 78,000-square-foot Shaw grocery store completed
by Albertsons in 2005 received the U.S. Green Building Council's
Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) certification by
employing energy-efficient HVAC systems and controls, refrigeration leak
detection technology and water-saving fixtures.
Albertsons Chairman and CEO Larry Johnston said in a statement the
company will “continue to pursue opportunities to seek LEED
certification in additional stores.”
The Northwest Energy Efficiency Alliance has targeted the grocery chain
segment as a prime candidate for energy savings. It has estimated the
total cumulative grocery chain energy savings potential in the Northwest
to be about 24 average megawatts (aMW). By 2025, the number approaches
40 aMW.
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This article has been reprinted courtesy of
nw current, a
publication of the
Northwest Energy Efficiency Alliance. It was first published in
January 2006. |
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