I am privy to plenty of energy efficiency case studies in my role with ZDNet’s GreenTech Pastures. Personally speaking, I feel that any company that focuses on cutting power consumption is worthy of attention because this is just such an important topic, but I can’t possibly know about ALL of you or write about all of you, so I do what I can to expose what I hear about technologies that might serve as an object lesson to the rest of you.

With that in mind, I mostly I write about green IT, ala green data center projects. But in today’s entry, I wanted to draw your attention to a municipal customer for Echelon, which makes the LonWorks automation and networking technology — which could be applied to basically anything that works on a network from a building control system to a street light project (ala what I’m talking about here).

The goodly souls at Echelon have sent me a whole bunch o’ case studies recently, including one that involves the effort of French community Senart en Essone (near Paris) to reduce the energy consumption of more than 3,500 streetlights by something like 35 percent.

The photo here gives you a sense of the dimming capacity of the technology in question, which was deployed in conjunction with SPIE, one of France’s largest streetlight maintenance companies. The solution includes dimmable ballasts, which allow for adjustments as required by the municipal government during different periods of the evening.

The way things works is pretty simple: if there are fewer cars on the road, the lamps are dimmer. If a particular lamp has failed, maintenance crews are automatically alerted, and they can be dispatched to rectify the problem immediately — as opposed to the up to 15 days that this process used to take. Light quality is adjusted to meet the optimal requirements of a particular environmental condition (a particularly rainy or blustery day, as an example).

The technology involved in the solution includes Philips Starsense light controllers, which embed an Echelon power line transceiver. This technology is connected to the the Echelon i.LON Smart Server, which sends commands to the controller’s existing power lines. The controls for a network like this can work over GPRS networks.

Echelon reports that a solution like the one deployed in Senart can help cut municipal power costs related to streetlights (not an insignificant cost for ANY municipality) by up to 35 percent per year. The case study might serve as a jumping off point for companies interested in inspiring the same energy efficiency results.

Ireland’s renewable energy sources have a potential three times the country’s energy requirements.

According to the book Green & Gold – Ireland a Clean Energy World Leader? by Alternative Energy Resources CEO John Travers, 20% of total Irish energy needs can be met by renewable energy within the next 10 years and 80% by 2050 and that 20% of Irish GDP can be derived from clean energy exports.

Travers, says: “Clean energy can help rescue Ireland from its current economic and energy challenges. In achieving energy independence, Ireland can become an outstanding world leader and a global beacon for the use of clean energy.

“Ireland is endowed with winds that are among the strongest in the world and the waves that crash against our western seaboard are some of the most powerful on the planet. Harnessing these and other clean energy sources such as solar and biomass offers Ireland a golden opportunity to overcome the energy challenge it faces.”

He adds: “There is the potential to create almost 100,000 jobs from harnessing renewable energy and applying energy efficiency activities.”

Texas-based Active Power has launched an online energy efficiency calculator to show organisations how to reduce datacentre power consumption and costs.

Aimed at CIOs and datacentre operators, the online calculator tool compares conventional battery technology with flywheel systems to show how datacentre power consumption can be reduced using a flywheel to store electricity for powering down servers in an emergency.

“CIOs and datacentre operators have to manage escalating business and IT demands and these changes almost always require delivering more power for a growing datacentre at reduced expense,” said Lisa Brown, vice-president of marketing and sales operations at Active Power.

“For those evaluating UPS systems, our efficiency calculator provides a quick snapshot of total energy savings, but more importantly the cost savings that can be achieved with the deployment of a CleanSource UPS system, the industry’s most efficient back-up power system at up to 98%,” she added.

The calculator support US dollars, pounds and euros and features an interactive slider bar to select UPS system size and load, provides estimates of kWh and money savings and printable PDF results.

An EU Directive will make it compulsory for energy efficiency ratings to be published in all UK homes ‘For Sale’ advertisements, including on For Sale boards, from 2012, it has been claimed today.

If correct, the directive, part of the Energy Performance in Buildings legislation, will effectively reverse a recent decision of the Conservative lead Coalition Government, and will bring back a delay in first day marketing.

In June, housing minister Grant Shapps announced it was no longer necessary to have an Energy Performance Certificate in place before a property could be marketed. It was only necessary to have commissioned one.

The ruling would also infuriate those estate agents who say that buyers are simply not interested in EPCs.

Ben Gutierrez, managing director of Photoplan, said: “reverting back to first day marketing will enable people to actually see the environmental impact before deciding to purchase. Where as currently most purchasers will not find out until the last minute and will not sway there decision”

“This ultimately has a negative impact on EPC’s as they are never considered in the buying process and are seen more as a nuisance”

“If first day marketing where to return this would make them vastly more relevant and would favor properties with the least impact on the environment and cheaper fuel bills”

A recent study conducted by a quango, the Energy Saving Trust, found most properties could be improved to meet current green energy standards for less than £3,000. The same study also claimed 70% of property buyers would negotiate a property’s price if they discovered it was not energy efficient.

The Energy Saving Trust has also called for energy inefficient properties to be banned from both the sales and rental markets.

The UK Government is also seriously considering charging buyers of properties with poor EPCs a premium on Stamp Duty.