General Motors Facilities Earn Energy Star Certification

GM Plants Recognized for Increased Energy Efficiency

Reliable Planet

Sixteen General Motors (GM) facilities recently earned recognition for their continued efforts to increase energy efficiency. GM’s Lansing Delta Township plant in Michigan and Fort Wayne assembly plant in Indiana earned an Energy Star certification for superior energy performance. The certification signifies that these plants are more energy efficient than 75 percent of similar buildings nationwide and meet strict performance levels set by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).

Improvements included new doors that isolate air flow in paint shops at the Lansing Delta Township plant and more efficient energy management systems at the Fort Wayne assembly plant. The Fort Wayne team also installed new variable-frequency drives that help cooling tower pump systems and fans operate with greater precision. The Fort Wayne assembly plant will receive nearly $1 million in utility incentives over the next three years as a result.

The installation of 186,000 LED bulbs and fixtures is one of many steps helping GM save $73 million in energy costs in 2016. Both the Lansing Delta Township plant and Fort Wayne assembly plant use LED lighting in their facilities.

 

The Grand Rapids Operations replaced 11,000 lights with LED tubes, improved its energy management systems and installed new variable-frequency drives on heating and cooling equipment. These activities resulted in an 18 percent reduction in energy intensity.

The Bedford Casting Operations reduced its energy intensity by 12 percent through improvements such as installing high-efficiency burner controls on its melting furnaces and monitoring the energy use of facility equipment in real time.

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By Historic American Buildings Survey [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons