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DOE recognizes Lineage for ‘flywheeling’ energy efficiency

July 9, 2019
Lineage Logistics recently was named a winner of the DOE's 2019 Better Practice Awards.

Lineage Logistics, a provider of temperature-controlled logistics solutions, recently was named a winner of the 2019 Better Practice Awards by the US Department of Energy’s (DOE) Better Plants Program (Better Plants).

The DOE Better Plants designation is bestowed to organizations that are making outstanding accomplishments in implementing and promoting the practices, principles and procedures of energy management.

The DOE recognized Lineage for pioneering a new and innovative way to improve energy productivity using a process the company calls “flywheeling,” which proactively manages energy consumption using a proprietary machine-learning technology to reduce cost and waste.

Last month, the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) issued a utility patent to Lineage and primary inventor Dr Alex Woolf, principal data scientist at Lineage, covering the flywheeling technology (US 10,323,878 B1).

“This great honor from the DOE is a testament to the hard work and dedication of our talented team, and it is quite humbling to be recognized as a leader in energy conservation,” said Greg Lehmkuhl, president and chief executive officer of Lineage.

“Flywheeling is one of the many ways Lineage lives our purpose of transforming the food supply chain to eliminate waste and help feed the world.”

The temperature-controlled supply chain is energy-intensive by nature, making energy conservation a key priority for Lineage, the company said. On average, each of its more than 200 facilities across North America, Europe and Asia can store approximately 24,000 pallets of inventory, the equivalent of approximately 770,000 home freezers. Lineage’s North American power consumption is approximately equivalent to that of a mid-sized US city.

“We are entrusted with ensuring that billions of pounds of food across the United States and the globe are kept at optimal temperatures throughout the supply chain, and we are obsessed with finding new ways to do this even more safely and efficiently than has ever been done before,” said Michael J McClendon, president of Lineage Europe and executive VP of network optimization.

Lineage will be formally recognized July 10-11 at the Better Buildings, Better Plants Summit in Arlington VA. During the summit, Lineage will present its award-winning project as part of the “Best of the Betters” session.

“Better Plants partners such as Lineage are implementing innovative energy efficiency solutions in the industrial space that are cutting costs and energy use, and the Better Practice Awards honor their leadership,” said Valri Lightner, DOE’s Advanced Manufacturing Office acting director.

About Lineage’s “flywheeling” technology

Lineage’s flywheeling technology minimizes energy costs and increases utilization of renewable energy sources by precisely timing electricity consumption. It determines when peak demand for energy usage will occur and avoids the relevant periods by super-cooling the warehouse in advance, the company said. Lineage’s algorithms rely on advanced physics, mathematical optimization, large-scale sensor deployments and machine learning to accurately quantify how each building interacts with its environment and optimize accordingly.

Lineage piloted flywheeling at its Mira Loma CA facility in 2018 with the goal of reducing the cost of refrigeration per pallet of goods. As part of this effort, Lineage deployed the flywheeling algorithms and also upgraded warehouse infrastructure, instrumentation and control equipment. In 2018, Lineage achieved a 39% reduction in normalized cost at Mira Loma as a result of this initiative, Lineage claimed, and it plans to roll it out to additional locations within the network in the coming year.

This flywheeling project is one example of the technology work done by the Lineage data science team, which Lineage says is the only team of its kind in the industry. Comprised of some of Silicon Valley’s brightest physicists, mathematicians, marine biologists, engineers and technologists, the team uses thermodynamics, mathematics, AI/machine learning, robotics, statistics, oceanography, computer simulation and data visualization to disrupt the world’s food supply chain by optimizing costs, increasing energy efficiencies to build the warehouses of the future and eliminating waste.

Click here to read more about the Lineage data science team.

About the Author

Informa Commercial Vehicle Staff

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