Operational Outlook & Implementation Roadmap.
GROSS ENERGY RECOVERY
$0
Projected 10-year utility savings before maintenance offsets and UV operating costs.
MONTHLY COST OF INACTION
$0
The modeled expense of deferred maintenance and inefficiency incurred every 30 days.
Beyond the Meter: The ROI of
Well-Being
While energy savings are the primary driver, the most significant impact often occurs in areas
the utility bill ignores. Safe Air UV provides a catered experience designed to capture "Soft
ROI":
- Occupant Productivity: Improving IAQ is linked to higher cognitive function
and reduced absenteeism.
- Asset Preservation: Continuous UV-C disinfection extends the functional
lifecycle of cooling coils and reduces mechanical stress.
- Stakeholder Confidence: A visible commitment to advanced hygiene provides a
powerful competitive advantage in today's market.
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT (NET ANNUAL)
EPA greenhouse gas equivalencies based on net kWh saved.
Next Steps: Validating Your
Savings
Step 01
Validation Audit
Confirm mechanical specs, coil dimensions, and utility rebate
eligibility.
Step 02
Technical Proposal
Receive a firm quote with finalized ROI and a turnkey installation
schedule.
Step 03
Implementation
Professional deployment with immediate energy and air quality
benefits.
Adam Skelton
President, Safe Air UV
Certified UV-C Specialist
safeairuv.com
The
Competitive Advantage
Beyond the financial ROI, this project addresses the Human Element. By
improving
IAQ and system hygiene, you achieve "Safety, Savings, and Confidence"—benefits that provide a
powerful competitive advantage for your facility, and an edge like no other ECM can offer.
We welcome the opportunity to review your mechanical schedule and refine this model into a
site-validated implementation plan.
PROJECT STANDARDS & AFFILIATIONS
TRM v2.4.1
Methodology & References (Screening-Level)
This calculator provides a screening-level engineering estimate of potential HVAC energy
recovery
associated with ultraviolet germicidal irradiation (UVGI) applied to cooling coils.
Energy impacts are modeled using physically distinct mechanisms:
• Airside fan energy recovery associated with pressure-drop (ΔP) reduction
• Cooling energy recovery associated with restored coil heat-transfer effectiveness (ΔT)
Baseline energy is derived from user-provided facility characteristics and conservative
operating
schedule assumptions typical of the selected building type. Climate normalization uses NOAA NCEI
1991–2020 CDD65 normals (airport stations).
Recovery bands reflect ranges reported in published field studies and ASHRAE technical guidance.
While this tool is not a measurement and verification study, its structure aligns conceptually
with industry M&V frameworks (ASHRAE Guideline 14 and IPMVP) through transparent baseline
definition,
explicit assumption disclosure, and separation of measure effects.
UVGI & Coil Performance Basis
• ASHRAE Handbook (2019). Chapter 62 – Ultraviolet Air and Surface Treatment.
• Bahnfleth, W. et al. (2015). Field Study of Energy Use Related Effects of Ultraviolet Germicidal
Irradiation of a Cooling Coil. Pennsylvania State University.
• Bahnfleth, W. (2017). Cooling Coil Ultraviolet Germicidal Irradiation. ASHRAE Journal 59(10):
72–74.
• Martin, Bahnfleth et al. (2008). Ultraviolet Germicidal Irradiation: Current Best Practices.
ASHRAE
Journal.
• Brais, N. (2015). Coil Cleaning: UV Fundamental Sizing and Energy Savings. September 2015.
• Kowalski, W. (2009). Ultraviolet Germicidal Irradiation Handbook. Springer.
• Levetin, E. et al. (2001). Effectiveness of germicidal UV radiation for reducing fungal
contamination
within air-handling units. Applied and Environmental Microbiology.
Measurement & Verification Alignment
• ASHRAE Guideline 14 – Measurement of Energy, Demand, and Water Savings.
• International Performance Measurement and Verification Protocol (IPMVP).
• DOE Uniform Methods Project (UMP).
• IUVA M&V Guidelines for Performance-Based Contracts (2021).
Climate & Environmental Factors
• NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI), Climate Normals 1991–2020.
• U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Greenhouse Gas Equivalencies Calculator.
This reference list represents foundational sources informing screening-level modeling assumptions.
Detailed methodology, assumptions, and version governance are maintained in the Safe Air UV TRM.