BSI PD IEC GUIDE 119:2017
$142.49
Preparation of energy efficiency publications and the use of basic energy efficiency publications and group energy efficiency publications
Published By | Publication Date | Number of Pages |
BSI | 2017 | 30 |
This Guide defines procedures for the preparation of energy efficiency (EE) publications and describes the relationship between technical committees (TCs) with group EE functions.
In the context of this Guide, “EE” refers to energy efficiency of products, systems and organizations.
It uses the boundary concept to address energy efficiency aspects (see IEC Guide 118) in the context of a systems approach.
This Guide is relevant to every TC which would like to publish a document dealing with EE.
PDF Catalog
PDF Pages | PDF Title |
---|---|
5 | CONTENTS |
7 | FOREWORD |
9 | INTRODUCTION |
10 | 1 Scope 2 Normative references 3 Terms and definitions |
11 | 4 Systems approach 4.1 General considerations |
12 | 4.2 Boundary description 4.2.1 General |
13 | 4.2.2 Elements of the boundary description 4.2.3 Input(s) 4.2.4 Output(s) 4.2.5 Driving parameters Figures Figure 1 – Boundary description and its elements |
14 | 4.2.6 Energy efficiency related KPI(s) 4.3 Broader boundary description – systems approach Figure 2 – Broader boundary description |
15 | 5 Assignment of horizontal energy efficiency functions and of group EE functions Figure 3 – Structure of IEC EE publications and function assignment |
16 | 6 Energy efficiency publications 6.1 Basic EE publications and group EE publications 6.1.1 General 6.1.2 Basic EE publications 6.1.3 Group EE publications |
17 | 6.2 Product publications 6.3 References to other publications 7 Responsibilities of TCs with horizontal EE functions and group EE functions 7.1 Liaison with other TCs 7.2 Requests from TCs for new work |
18 | 8 Responsibilities of TCs 8.1 General 8.2 Application of basic EE publications 8.3 Application of group EE publications |
19 | 8.4 New work requests to TCs with horizontal or group EE functions |
20 | Annex A (informative) Boundary examples Figure A.1 – Boundary setting example: three boundaries for independent solution Figure A.2 – Boundary setting example: a boundary of a group |
21 | Figure A.3 – A boundary of group with systematic solution |
22 | Annex B (informative) The extended product approach as a collaborative example (reference IEC 61800-9-1) B.1 Sharing the TC responsibilities B.1.1 General B.1.2 Practical case |
23 | B.1.3 Example of how different TCs may determine their role in a common collaboration Figure B.1 – Relation between different components at different levels |
24 | B.1.4 Example of how different TCs should share their responsibilities Figure B.2 – Link between every box’s corresponding TCs |
25 | B.2 Practical example – a motor system and pump system collaboration Figure B.3 – TC’s responsibilities with EE key parameters at the different levels, starting from the plant level and going down to individual components Figure B.4 – Interaction between the two SAMs |
26 | Figure B.5 – The SAMs of the pump system (the extended product) and the motor system |
27 | Bibliography |