The RTF is a technical advisory committee to the Northwest Power and Conservation Council established in 1999 to develop standards to verify and evaluate energy efficiency savings

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2024 RTF Meetings
2024 meeting dates have been set and can be viewed on our calendar. There will be a mix of in-person and virtual meetings, which are denoted on the meeting page.
 
Current RFPs:
 
Visit the RFP page for additional information.
 
The RTF is seeking proposals to support the expansion and refinement of its HVAC measure suite, specifically focused on medium to larger commercial buildings. The scope of this project will include reviewing and updating existing measures, as well as developing new RTF measures. The RTF will consider proposals for all or a portion of the scope, including specific HVAC technologies or particular tasks. Proposals are due by Friday, June 7, 2024 to Laura Thomas at rtfadmin@nwcouncil.org
 
The RTF is seeking proposals to characterize the data centers market with the intent of gaining a broad sense of the market and the possible measures for energy efficiency in each type of data center. Proposals are due by Friday, May 31, 2024 to Laura Thomas (rtfadmin@nwcouncil.org)
 
 

 

 

Recent and Upcoming Meetings

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FEB 2023
22 - 23
WED THU
RTF Meeting
AUG 2023
22 - 23
TUE WED
RTF Meeting
MAY 2024
21 - 22
TUE WED
RTF Meeting
AUG 2024
20 - 21
TUE WED
RTF Meeting
NOV 2024
19 - 20
TUE WED
RTF Meeting
DEC 2024
17 - 18
TUE WED
RTF Meeting

How does the RTF help the region achieve its goals?

 

With the passage of the Northwest Power Act in 1980, Congress defined energy efficiency as a key resource for meeting the region's load growth. The Regional Technical Forum was established as a body that would provide the region with consistent and reliable quantification of energy savings estimates for specific efficient technologies or actions. The energy savings estimates generated through the public processes of the RTF enable accurate estimates of the region's efficiency potential vital to power system planning, as well as a better understanding of the region's efficiency accomplishments. Since 1978, energy efficiency has provided significant benefits to the Northwest:

$5 billion

dollars saved from avoided energy consumption

24.4 million

metric tons of carbon dioxide avoided

7,678 aMW

saved making efficiency the NW’s second largest energy resource