1. Energy Management Working Group │ slide 1
THE ENERGY
MANAGEMENT WORKING
GROUP
Meeting Climate Goals through Energy Management
Policies and Standards
5000&1 SEAPs 4th Webinar
February 23, 2017
Ms. Pamela de los Reyes
Energetics Incorporated
EMWG Coordination Team
2. Energy Management Working Group │ slide 2
ENERGY MANAGEMENT WORKING GROUP
(EMWG)
http://www.cleanenergyministerial.org/EnergyManagement
The EMWG leverages the extensive expertise of its 18
member governments to accelerate the adoption and use
of energy management systems such as ISO 50001 in
industry and in commercial buildings worldwide.
Fora: The EMWG is an initiative of the Clean
Energy Ministerial and IPEEC and also reports out
to the G20 Energy Efficiency Action Plan.
Partners: A range of organizations promoting
energy efficiency and energy management, such as
UNIDO and as a Category A Liaison to ISO TC 301.
EMWG’s Energy Management Campaign: Driving
action to reach 50,001 global certifications to ISO
50001 by 2020.
www.driveto50001.org
United States
India
Canada
European
Commission
Australia
Sweden
Japan
Mexico
Korea
South Africa
Indonesia
Chile
Saudi Arabia
Finland Germany
United Arab
Emirates
China Denmark
3. Energy Management Working Group │ slide 3
ISO 50001 - A KEY STRATEGY FOR
FIGHTING CLIMATE CHANGE
Over +50 countries have worked together through
ISO to create a globally-relevant standard that
countries can leverage to meet their international
climate commitments
ISO 50001 is:
– Ambitious and quantifiable:
Relevant to sectors that account for over 50%
of global energy use
Data-driven action to improve energy
performance on a continual basis
– Transparent, comparable and verifiable:
Globally-harmonized; transparent
certification process; internationally-relevant
– Business friendly
~15,000
certified sites
worldwide
since 2011
4. Energy Management Working Group │ slide 4
THE NEED TO TURN BEST PRACTICE STANDARDS
INTO CONSISTENT IMPLEMENTATION
Global Standard
Development
• ISO 50001 Standard Technical Committee plays
an important role in defining international best
practice standards and guidance.
More
International
Cooperation
Needed!
• Development of robust policies, programs, and
resources for national and international use
• Sharing of best practices to ensure robust and
consistent implementation of the standard
Implementation
• Government, international organizations,
utilities, energy service companies and others
work on the ground to help organizations
implement best practice standards
5. Energy Management Working Group │ slide 5
KEY PRINCIPLES FOR ISO 50001 SUCCESS
Building on years of input and engagement from ISO 50001
implementers from around the globe, the EMWG has distilled four
“Key Principles” which define the value and need for international
engagement to ensure mutual success in maximizing the value of ISO
50001 for business and the climate.
1. ISO 50001 provides a framework for measuring climate impacts
2. Qualified ISO 50001 professionals maximize global impacts
3. Robust ISO 50001 certification strategies support consistent global
outcomes
4. International input strengthens the market relevance of ISO 50001
portfolio
6. Energy Management Working Group │ slide 6
PRINCIPLE 1
ISO 50001 provides a framework for measuring climate impacts
• Reliable data is critical to enable corporate and government leaders to make
informed decisions regarding ISO 50001
• Internationally acceptable methods needed for data collection, M&V, and analysis on
ISO 50001
Example actions:
• Work with certification bodies to share ISO 50001 certification data; contribute
toward forthcoming global International Accreditation Forum (IAF) database
• Contribute to international forums conducting analysis on ISO 50001 implementation
and impacts
• Develop case studies with data on the business value of ISO 50001
• Promote effective measurement and verification best practices for ISO 50001
7. Energy Management Working Group │ slide 7
Energy EmissionsCost
ISO 50001 Impacts
Methodology
ISO 50001 IMPACTS METHODOLOGY AND
TOOL AVAILABLE FOR FREE ONLINE!
Country/Region specific
energy consumption by
sector
Energy consumption,
emission intensity,
and cost by source
ISO 50001 EnMS
uptake based on
historical data
Download at
www.cleanenergyministerial.org/
energymanagement
8. Energy Management Working Group │ slide 8
PRINCIPLE 2
Qualified ISO 50001 professionals maximize global impacts
• Organizations need access to reliable, skilled ISO 50001 professionals in order to
maximize their EnMS energy saving potential and return on investment
• ISO 50001 requires a new combination of knowledge and skills:
– Management system expertise
– Energy efficiency
• The effectiveness and impact of ISO 50001 standards requires skilled personnel with
these skills:
– Consultants and implementation experts that help companies identify
opportunities to maximize the benefit of ISO 50001
– Auditors that conduct robust ISO 50001 certification audits and provide confidence
in ISO 50001 certification outcomes.
– Performance Verifiers that can evaluate the quantitative impacts of EnMS
implementation.
9. Energy Management Working Group │ slide 9
Example actions:
• Ask your team and consultant and certification bodies about their
ISO 50001 qualifications BEFORE YOU HIRE THEM!
• Promote rigorous training and certification programs for ISO 50001
professionals (implementation consultants and auditors)
• Adopt ISO 50001 workforce programs and best practices promoted
by leading international forums on ISO 50001
• Promote effective measurement and verification best practices for
ISO 50001
QUALIFIED ISO 50001 PROFESSIONALS
MAXIMIZE GLOBAL IMPACTS ISO50001
10. Energy Management Working Group │ slide 10
PRINCIPLE 3
Robust ISO 50001 certification strategies support consistent global outcomes
• Strong ISO 50001 certification outcomes require cooperation among many
supporting actors: governments, national standards authorities, accreditation and
certification bodies, training organizations, private sector end users, and ISO 50001
professionals.
• Each group contributes role in supporting quality ISO 50001 programs
11. Energy Management Working Group │ slide 11
NEED FOR INTERNATIONAL CONSISTENCY
AND COOPERATION ON QUALITY
INFRASTRUCTURE
• Example actions:
• Hire only ISO 50001 Accredited Certification Bodies
• Hire only ISO 50001 Certification Bodies that will guarantee that certified
ISO 50001 Auditors will support your certification audit team.
12. Energy Management Working Group │ slide 12
PRINCIPLE 4
International input strengthens the market relevance of ISO 50001 portfolio
• The ISO 50001 family of standards continues to grow and strengthen based on
feedback from stakeholders
• Participation in the standard development and revision process provides two-way
benefits: standards remain reflective of stakeholder needs and effective, and national
programs remain up-to-date with current standards and best practices
13. Energy Management Working Group │ slide 13
INTERNATIONAL INPUT
STRENGTHENS THE MARKET
RELEVANCE OF ISO 50001
PORTFOLIO
14. Energy Management Working Group │ slide 14
2017 Winners to be Announced at CEM8 in China!
2016 Award of Excellence Winners
Award Program Information
• 2017 Program Website
• 2016 Award Video - Value of ISO 50001
60+ Company Case Studies!
• Energy Management Working Group
Website
Take Action!
1. Promote Global Program to your city and
local companies
16. Energy Management Working Group │ slide 16
Take Action! Join this campaign to drive action to reach
50,001 global certifications to the ISO 50001
international by 2020.
The Energy Management Campaign recruits partners to:
• Endorse key principles for quality implementation of ISO 50001;
• Pledge concrete actions to promote uptake of the standard and principles;
• Contribute to international technical exchange;
• Recognize leadership through Energy Management Leadership Awards,
and;
• Track and share progress on uptake of the standard.
www.Driveto50001.org
18. Energy Management Working Group │ slide 18
TAKE ACTION!
Join the Energy Management Campaign
Conduct a local ISO 50001 Potential Analysis
Only use Qualified ISO 50001 Professionals and Certification Bodies
Share EMWG Award Program with Private Sector
Contact: Graziella Siciliano,
EMWG Coordinator – graziella.siciliano@hq.doe.gov
For more information about EMWG and its activities, visit:
www.cleanenergyministerial.org/energymanagement