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Johnson Controls announces cutting Microsoft Beijing’s energy footprint

Company says it has helped the IT major’s China operations achieve energy savings of 27.9% through continuous retrofitting and optimisation

  • By Content Team |
  • Published: August 11, 2022
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SHANGHAI, China, 11 August 2022: Johnson Controls (JCI) said it has partnered with Microsoft Beijing Campus for its ongoing retrofit and optimisation of building operations, achieving 27.9% energy savings and ensuring key equipment uptime to 98%. As a result, the campus has been granted an energy saving endorsement and financial subsidy by the Beijing Municipal Government and the Haidian District Government, JCI said.

“China’s pledge to ensure carbon emissions peak by 2030 and achieve carbon neutrality by 2060 places a huge responsibility on its buildings sector to dive deeply into the latest sustainable engineering technology,” said Anu Rathninde, President, Asia Pacific, JCI. “In this project, we joined hands with Microsoft to raise the bar on what is possible for energy-efficient buildings, and their faith in Johnson Control AI-enabled OpenBlue Net Zero Buildings solution has been proven out. The energy and emissions savings on their Beijing Campus project help Microsoft and us highlight what is now possible, sustainability-wise, for retrofit buildings programs in China.”

The Microsoft Beijing Campus consists of two buildings with a total building area of 148,000 square metres, The campus has now successfully passed an energy audit conducted by Haidian District, Beijing, with new annual energy savings of 27.9%, JCI said. That includes work to upgrade existing chiller systems, achieving 30% better energy efficiency, JCI added.

A key strategy in reducing carbon emissions was to enable energy-efficient operations management, JCI said. The Microsoft real estate and facilities team migrated the applications and data storage of the different systems – power supply, building controls, energy management and smart management to Azure platform, creating a central, integrated “digital brain” for the Campus, JCI said. This was coupled with JCI’s AI-enhanced OpenBlue Enterprise Manager (OBEM), with the combination resulting in far more efficient building management, improved user experience and a significant reduction in the energy consumption of daily operations, JCI said.

Microsoft Beijing Campus also uses its Metasys Building Automation System (BAS), JCI said. By monitoring the cooling and heating equipment, Metasys system feeds large amounts of data into OBEM for analysis, JCI said. During the retrofit, Metasys was upgraded and integrated with legacy BAS, JCI said. With more sub-systems connected into Metasys, field operations risk was reduced, and human resource use was optimised, JCI said.

As well as providing the technology, JCI said, its service team for controls systems are now able to use the additional insights being generated to achieve more than 98% uptime of key equipment and increase the level of operational automation. The improvements add to the sustainability work that it has been supporting Microsoft Beijing Campus with since 2010, JCI said. That earlier collaboration saw the campus reducing power consumption by more than 30 million kilowatt-hours from 2011-2020, JCI added.

The long-term project with Microsoft, JCI said, adds to a growing portfolio of projects demonstrating the potential to cost-effectively use advanced technology to reduce emissions using the OpenBlue platform.

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