
Sept. 26, 2002
CU-BOULDER NAMES NEW ENERGY CONSERVATION OFFICER TO IDENTIFY, IMPLEMENT
CONSERVATION PRIORITIES
Contact: Jeff Lipton, 303-492-1525
Jeannine Malmsbury, 303-492-3115
A new energy conservation officer has been named to help reduce utility
consumption at the University of Colorado at Boulder in a strategic move
by Vice Chancellor Paul Tabolt to reduce energy demand and associated
costs throughout campus.
Moe Tabrizi, an industrial engineer and former senior manager in the
high-tech industry, is charged with developing, evaluating and implementing
utility conservation measures to reverse a trend of increased campus
energy use in recent years. Tabrizi will report to Jeff Lipton, executive
director of Facilities Management.
CU-Boulder’s energy consumption has risen by 5 percent annually
over the past several years, Lipton said, highlighting the need for a
coordinated campus approach to save energy and lower utility costs.
“
We created this position in order to have one person whose sole focus
is to analyze how and where our greatest energy use is concentrated and
where in our system we can make changes in order to achieve the maximum
energy savings possible,” Lipton said.
Doing that requires a person with high-level technical, analytical and
financial skills and dedicated time to devote to finding and correcting
energy inefficiencies, he said. In the past, energy conservation has
been handled on an ad hoc basis, with little coordinated effort in place
to identify the most cost-effective areas for improvement.
Besides identifying areas for conservation, Tabrizi will be responsible
for working with campus departments to develop their own conservation
plans.
“
Spreading the word about the importance of energy conservation on campus
will be an important part of this job,” Lipton said. “Money
saved from utility costs can be reinvested into the academic enterprise.”
As energy conservation officer, Tabrizi will manage a comprehensive energy
conservation program on campus, prepare reports recommending conservation
improvements, develop and implement a conservation awareness program
to motivate campus departments to conserve energy, prepare grant requests
for campus conservation projects and analyze energy consumption data
to identify conservation targets, particularly those that could produce
significant utility cost savings.
Tabrizi will work closely with the CU Environmental Center, Housing and
the UCSU-owned building managers. He also will help support the efforts
of the already existing Campus Resource Conservation Committee.
Prior to this position, Tabrizi worked as a senior manager for new product
development at the telecommunications firm Avaya in Westminster, as a
senior manager for engineering and operations at Lucent Technologies
in Westminster and as an engineering manager for AT&T in Westminster.
At Avaya, Tabrizi was responsible for planning the next generation products
and moving the technology through production and manufacturing. He directed
product technology transfer to international factories, led a successful
product cost-reduction program and was involved in Avaya’s energy
conservation efforts.
Tabrizi holds a bachelor’s degree in industrial engineering from
the University of Oklahoma and a master’s degree in industrial
engineering, also from the University of Oklahoma.
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