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Energy Answers by Tactical Energy Group

Energy Answers by Tactical Energy Group

By: Daniel Burke
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Energy Answers is the commercial and industrial energy management show from Tactical Energy Group, hosted by Daniel Burke. This series covers the complete C&I energy canon — 100 decisions every plant manager, facilities director, and industrial operator needs to understand: demand charges, power factor, utility rate structures, energy procurement, load management, demand response, backup power, renewable options, submetering, and everything in between. If you manage a facility and energy costs or power reliability are on your radar, this is where you get real answers — no theory, no jargon, no sales pitch on the first visit. New episode every week.

2026 Daniel Burke
Economics Politics & Government
Episodes
  • Energy Decision # 13 - VFDs Explained: Cut Motor Energy & Protect Equipment | Energy Answers by TEG
    Jun 28 2026

    Variable Frequency Drives (VFDs) are one of the most powerful tools operators have to cut energy use in motor‑driven systems and reduce mechanical stress on pumps and fans. This episode explains what a VFD actually does, where the cube‑law savings come from, and how to tell if a given motor or pump in your facility is a good candidate.

    This is part of the complete C&I energy management series from Tactical Energy Group. 100 decisions. Every one that matters.

    In this episode, Daniel Burke covers:
    • Why electric motor‑driven systems often account for more than half of a facility’s electricity use
    • What a VFD is in practical terms and how it sits between the grid and the motor
    • The pump and fan affinity laws and why running at 80% speed can cut power to ~51%
    • High‑value applications: centrifugal pumps, fans, compressors, cooling towers, air handlers, and wastewater systems
    • Reliability benefits: eliminating water hammer, reducing inrush current, and lowering pressure stress on older piping
    • Advanced features: integrated PID control, Dynamic V/f mode, common DC bus for regenerative power, and near‑unity power factor
    • Limitations: when a VFD on a constant‑load motor increases consumption, inverter‑duty motor requirements, and harmonic issues
    • A worked 60 hp fan example showing over $10,000/year in savings and a ~17‑month payback

    Who this is for: plant managers, maintenance managers, operators, and energy managers in industrial manufacturing, water and wastewater treatment, commercial HVAC, and mining operations who are asking “how much energy does a VFD save” or “when does a VFD not make sense.”

    If you're trying to decide whether to invest in Variable Frequency Drives to optimize your motor and pump operations for energy savings and equipment life, this episode is built for you.

    Read the full breakdown on Variable Frequency Drives (VFDs) at tacticalenergygroup.com/variable-frequency-drives-vfds.

    If you're an Indiana C&I operator actively evaluating this decision, get your free Energy Decision Blueprint at blueprint.tac-nrg.com.

    Visit tacticalenergygroup.com for more practical tools and the Energy Decision Blueprint for qualified Indiana C&I operators.

    Timestamps:
    0:00 – Why motors are your largest hidden energy lever
    3:15 – What a VFD actually is and how it controls speed
    7:20 – The cube law: why slowing down saves so much power
    11:40 – Where VFDs fit and where they do not
    16:30 – Reliability, water hammer, and inrush current
    20:15 – Advanced features, pitfalls, and 17‑month payback math
    24:30 – Decision framework and questions for your team


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    21 mins
  • Energy Decision # 12 - LED Lighting Retrofits and Advanced Lighting Controls | Energy Answers by TEG
    Jun 23 2026

    LED Lighting Retrofits and Advanced Lighting Controls are one of the fastest ways for commercial and industrial facilities to cut hard operating costs by reducing lighting energy and slashing maintenance work. This episode walks through the retrofit pathways, the real ROI math, and how to decide whether you should do a simple lamp swap or a full fixture and controls upgrade.

    This is Energy Decision #12 in the complete C&I energy management series from Tactical Energy Group. 100 decisions. Every one that matters.

    In this episode, Daniel Burke covers:
    • What an LED retrofit actually is and the differences between Type A lamp replacement, Type B ballast bypass, and Type C full fixture replacement
    • Why LED luminaires are 75–90% more efficient and last 5–10 times longer than traditional fluorescent and HID fixtures
    • How advanced lighting controls like dimming, high‑end trim, occupancy and vacancy sensing, daylight harvesting, and scheduling stack additional savings on top of the retrofit
    • The role of Networked Lighting Controls (NLC) and Luminaire‑Level Lighting Controls (LLLC) in existing buildings
    • FEMP and DLC efficiency and quality standards, including luminous efficacy benchmarks for troffers, linear ambient, and high‑bay/low‑bay fixtures
    • A worked ROI example: $35,000 project cost, $19,360 annual savings, 1.81‑year simple payback, and 10‑year ROI north of 400%
    • Utility rebates, Section 179D tax deductions up to $5 per square foot, and Lighting‑as‑a‑Service and performance contract options
    • How to plan and phase installation to minimize disruption in warehouses, plants, schools, hospitals, and offices

    Who this is for: facility managers, plant managers, operations leaders, and energy managers in commercial facilities, industrial plants, warehouses, educational institutions, and healthcare facilities who are asking “LED retrofit payback period commercial building” or “how to calculate energy savings LED replacement.”

    If you're trying to decide whether your facility should invest in LED lighting retrofits and advanced controls to optimize energy spend and operational efficiency, this episode is built for you.

    Read the full breakdown on LED Lighting Retrofits and Advanced Lighting Controls at tacticalenergygroup.com/led-lighting-retrofits-and-advanced-lighting-controls.

    If you're an Indiana C&I operator actively evaluating this decision, get your free Energy Decision Blueprint at blueprint.tac-nrg.com.

    Visit tacticalenergygroup.com for more practical tools and the Energy Decision Blueprint for qualified Indiana C&I operators.

    Timestamps:
    0:00 – Why LED retrofits are on every facility manager’s capital list
    3:10 – What an LED retrofit actually is (Type A, B, C, hybrid)
    7:25 – Where the money comes from: energy and maintenance
    11:40 – Controls: dimming, high‑end trim, occupancy, daylight, scheduling, LLLC
    17:20 – FEMP, DLC, and how to spec the right products
    21:30 – ROI, rebates, 179D, and financing options
    25:15 – Implementation risks, maintenance mindset, and decision framework


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    24 mins
  • Energy Decision #11 - Peak Shaving Explained | Energy Answers by TEG
    Jun 13 2026

    C&I Peak Shaving is the set of strategies commercial and industrial facilities use to cut the most expensive line on many power bills: demand charges based on the single highest kilowatt interval. This episode breaks down how demand charges are built, what levers you actually have, and how to decide whether batteries, generators, or operational changes give you the best return.

    This is Energy Decision #11 in the complete C&I energy management series from Tactical Energy Group. 100 decisions. Every one that matters.

    In this episode, Daniel Burke covers:
    • The core difference between kW and kWh and why demand charges exist
    • How demand charges can reach 30%–70% of a large C&I electricity bill
    • The three mechanical levers for peak shaving: load shedding/shifting, onsite generation, and battery energy storage systems
    • Practical tactics: HVAC setpoint adjustment, process rescheduling, pump scheduling, and smart EV charging
    • When to use generators, when to use batteries, and when CHP or hybrid solar‑plus‑storage fits
    • Key metrics: demand charge rate ($/kW), peak demand (kW), load factor, peak duration and frequency, round‑trip efficiency
    • Capital and operating cost ranges, typical 3–7 year payback targets, and stranded‑asset risk
    • How regional programs and demand response incentives stack on top of demand charge savings

    Who this is for: plant managers, facility managers, superintendents, COOs, and energy managers at commercial buildings, industrial facilities, manufacturers, hospitals, universities, and data centers who want to know “how to reduce demand charges on an industrial electricity bill” without disrupting operations.

    If you're trying to decide what the most cost‑effective peak shaving strategy is for your facility to mitigate demand charges and operational risks, this episode is built for you.

    Read the full breakdown on C&I Peak Shaving at tacticalenergygroup.com/c-i-peak-shaving.

    If you're an Indiana C&I operator actively evaluating this decision, get your free Energy Decision Blueprint at blueprint.tac-nrg.com.

    Visit tacticalenergygroup.com for more practical tools and the Energy Decision Blueprint for qualified Indiana C&I operators.

    Timestamps:
    0:00 – What C&I peak shaving actually is and why it’s on your bill
    3:20 – kW vs kWh and why demand charges are so large
    7:30 – The three levers: load, onsite generation, and batteries
    12:10 – Sizing, economics, and when the math works
    18:25 – Technology choice by use case and common misconceptions
    23:40 – Decision framework and questions for your team


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    23 mins
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