ACEEE
NEWS RELEASE
ACEEE
AWARDS "CHAMPIONS OF ENERGY EFFICIENCY IN INDUSTRY"
Contact: Neal Elliott,
(202) 487-0615 (c)
or (202) 429-8873 (p)
Press and Media Contact: Glee
Murray, (202) 429-0063
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
July 20, 2005
WEST POINT, NY
-- The American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy (ACEEE)
named three Champions of Energy Efficiency today at its Summer
Study on Energy Efficiency in Industry. Presented to outstanding
leaders involved with the industrial sector, the awards recognize
leadership and accomplishment in the energy efficiency field. Winners
were selected based on demonstrated excellence in program implementation,
leadership, research and development, energy policy, private sector
initiatives, and international initiatives. The 2005 winners are:
- Peter
Salmon-Cox. Since 2001, until his recent retirement from the
U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), Peterin his capacity as
Technical Lead, Technology Delivery, within the Energy Efficiency
and Renewable Energy programhas been instrumental in strengthening
the strategy and advancing the implementation of the DOE's BestPractices
program. Peter quickly assumed leadership of the program and helped
develop it into a coherent and focused technology delivery strategy.
Under his direction, BestPractices rigorously tapped in
to multiple channels to promote energy efficiency not only on
the plant floor, but also throughout many management levels within
the nation's most energy-intensive manufacturing corporations.
Because of his efforts, BestPractices has become among
the most effective DOE Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy
programs at achieving and measuring energy savings. Through Peter's
hard work, BestPractices has worked with 10,644 manufacturing
plants and is helping industry save 200 trillion Btu per year
(the equivalent of $1 billion dollars in energy costs). These
results, buttressed by others throughout his career, reflect Peter's
strategic leadership and diligent efforts to improve and augment
outreach to industry, and to advance energy efficiency overall.
- Fred
Schoeneborn. The energy management career of Fred Schoeneborn
began and blossomed at Mobil Corporation where he developed and
directed the company's energy management program, eventually elevating
it to a level that it was considered one of Mobil's most valuable
strategic assets. The fundamental impact Fred had on operations
and staff at Mobil was never clearer than when he worked to unify
his energy team members and to implement energy efficiency projects
totaling over $103 million during a four-year period from 1996
to 1999. Since his retirement from Mobil Corporation, Fred has
served as an invaluable consultant to corporate energy managers
in a variety of manufacturing industries. His role as a mentor,
coach, educator, and strategist for energy efficiency has been
essential to the institutionalization of energy management programs
in companies that often receive national recognition due to his
skill and dedication. He takes an innovative approach to the management
of energy programs by supplementing projects with a high level
of corporate visibility, which helps encourage recognition and
learning among companies as well as solidifying their commitments
to energy efficiency. Most recently, Fred has begun work with
the government's ENERGY STAR® program, continuing
his tireless support of energy efficiency in industry and raising
the bar of performance of the organizations he touches to world
class standards.
- EnSave,
Inc. EnSave supports the American agricultural sector with
innovative energy conservation and pollution prevention programs
by bringing together a diverse community of energy, utility, environmental,
and industry groups. Since 1998, EnSave has worked across the
United States designing and implementing agricultural energy conservation
programs; providing agriculture producers and food processors
with cost-effective ways to reduce operating costs while saving
energy and reducing pollution; and ultimately using its programs
to encourage economic investment in the rural economy and improve
the quality of America's land, air, and water. In New York alone,
through a program involving a number of dairy producers, EnSave
helped to save 10,000,000 kWh, reduce NOx emissions by 2.92 tons,
and save about $1.2 million in first-year energy costs. Many other
similar programs and examples abound. It should be noted that
EnSave provides a valuable service to a hard-to-reach and under-served
sectoragriculture and its multiple dimensions (e.g., dairy,
swine, and poultry). The energy savings for an individual farm
may be small, but through the aggregation of a large number of
farms, EnSave is able to help a wide cross-section of America's
farms and the rural communities in which they operate. The cultivation
of agriculture and rural communities through EnSave's energy efficiency
programs has been instrumental and essential in strengthening
the fabric of one of our nation's primary industries.
These winners
were nominated by their peers and selected by a committee of ACEEE's
Board of Directors. Selection criteria were based on the nominee's
impact, innovation, and leadership in the energy efficiency field.
Visit the ACEEE Champions of Energy
Efficiency page for more information about the awards.
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About ACEEE: The American Council
for an Energy-Efficient Economy is an independent, nonprofit organization
dedicated to advancing energy efficiency as a means of promoting
both economic prosperity and environmental protection. For information
about ACEEE and its programs, publications, and conferences, contact
ACEEE, 1001 Connecticut Avenue, N.W., Suite 801, Washington, D.C.
20036-5525 or visit http://aceee.org
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