Overall Rating Gold
Overall Score 83.12
Liaison Patrick McKee
Submission Date Nov. 16, 2023

STARS v2.2

University of Connecticut
OP-6: Clean and Renewable Energy

Status Score Responsible Party
Complete 0.12 / 4.00 Patrick McKee
Senior Sustainability Program Manager
Office of Sustainability
"---" indicates that no data was submitted for this field

Total energy consumption, performance year:
2,078,498.32 MMBtu

Clean and renewable electricity (report kilowatt-hours):
kWh MMBtu
Imported electricity from certified/verified clean and renewable sources (i.e., bundled green power purchases) 17,451,663 Kilowatt-hours 59,545.07 MMBtu
Electricity from on-site, clean and renewable sources (rights retained/retired) 41,240 Kilowatt-hours 140.71 MMBtu

A brief description of the certified/verified sources of clean and renewable electricity:

All UConn purchased power from Eversource is obtained through a third party renewables contract specifying a minimum of 100% of the amount purchased is to be produced from renewable sources. Currently the third party vendors are ConEdison for the Central Utility Plant and Cogeneration Facility and Direct Energy for Storrs and Depot campus buildings not receiving electricity from the Cogeneration Facility. Electricity is only purchased when UConn cannot supply all of the necessary power from our Cogeneration Facility. On average this amounts to about 10% per year of electricity usage at the Storrs and Depot campuses.


A brief description of the on-site renewable electricity generating facilities/devices:

In the fall semester of 2016, 42 solar thermal panels on top of the new Werth Residence Tower building began producing hot water. They are estimated to provide approximately 20% of the building’s hot water requirement.

UConn also has several solar photovoltaic arrays on the Storrs and Depot campuses. There is a 25 kW solar array on the roof of the Werth Residence Tower, a 3.3 kW solar array near the Center for Clean Energy Engineering (C2E2) on the Depot Campus and an 8.28 kW solar PV array, which sits on top of the Reclaimed Water Facility on the Storrs Campus. Although not counted above, UConn has a 460 kW hydrogen clean energy fuel cell near C2E2 on the Depot Campus. This fuel cell generates electricity through an electro-chemical reaction rather than combustion. The fuel cell prevents the release of approximately 616 metric tons of CO2 per year versus a comparable conventional fossil-fueled generator and, because energy is produced without combustion, emits near zero other harmful air pollutants.

http://news.engr.uconn.edu/exploring-solar-energy-at-uconn.php

http://today.uconn.edu/2012/04/uconn-commissions-fuel-cell-power-plant/

The fuel cell is on University property, but is owned and maintained by an outside company. UConn purchases the power from this company through a power purchasing agreement (PPA).


Clean and renewable thermal energy (report MMBtu):
MMBtu
Clean and renewable stationary fuels used on-site to generate thermal energy 140.70 MMBtu
Imported steam, hot water, and/or chilled water from certified/verified clean and renewable sources 0 MMBtu

A brief description of the clean and renewable stationary fuels:

Small solar thermal system on the roof of Werth Residence Hall


A brief description of the certified/verified sources of clean and renewable thermal energy:
---

Unbundled renewable energy products (report kWh):
kWh MMBtu
Purchased RECs, GOs, I-RECs or equivalent unbundled renewable energy products certified by a third party 0 Kilowatt-hours 0 MMBtu

A brief description of the unbundled renewable energy products:
---

Total clean and renewable energy generated or purchased:
59,826.49 MMBtu

Percentage of total energy consumption from clean and renewable sources:
2.88

Website URL where information about the institution’s support for clean and renewable energy is available:
Electricity use, by source (percentage of total, 0-100):
Percentage of total electricity use (0-100)
Biomass 0
Coal 0
Geothermal 0
Hydro 0
Natural gas 91.49
Nuclear 0
Solar photovoltaic 0.01
Wind 0
Other (please specify and explain below) 8.50

A brief description of other sources of electricity not specified above:

Other means electricity generated by UConn's 400 kW clean energy hydrogen fuel cell and occasionally, imported power, oil, and propane for emergencies.


Energy used for heating buildings, by source::
Percentage of total energy used to heat buildings (0-100)
Biomass 0
Coal 0
Electricity 0
Fuel oil 8.24
Geothermal 0
Natural gas 91.69
Other (please specify and explain below) 0.06

A brief description of other sources of building heating not specified above:

Thermal loads from the 400kW hydrogen fuel cell on the Depot campus and solar thermal on the roof of Werth Residence Hall.


Additional documentation to support the submission:
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Data source(s) and notes about the submission:

A hydrogen fuel cell, even one which extracts hydrogen from natural gas, is a clean source of electricity and thermal energy, yet it is not eligible. It would increase our percentage above considerably. We have a 400kW fuel cell on our campus, reliably generating nearly ten times the electricity generated from our solar arrays. A hydrogen fuel cell generates electricity and heat through an electro-chemical reaction, not combustion. It produces no air emissions, like HAPs, NOx or SO2. AASHE should allow this to be counted as a clean energy source.


A hydrogen fuel cell, even one which extracts hydrogen from natural gas, is a clean source of electricity and thermal energy, yet it is not eligible. It would increase our percentage above considerably. We have a 400kW fuel cell on our campus, reliably generating nearly ten times the electricity generated from our solar arrays. A hydrogen fuel cell generates electricity and heat through an electro-chemical reaction, not combustion. It produces no air emissions, like HAPs, NOx or SO2. AASHE should allow this to be counted as a clean energy source.

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.