Occupancy-Based Cooling Scheduling: BMS Strategies for 25-35% Indian Office Energy Savings

A typical Indian office’s HVAC operates 8-10 hours per workday (typically 8 AM-7 PM) with peak occupancy mid-day. Yet many buildings run cooling 24/7 at design conditions, including weekends + nights. The simplest, lowest-cost energy reduction lever is occupancy-based cooling scheduling — reducing or shutting cooling outside occupied hours.

This guide covers the four scheduling strategies, their implementation in BMS/BAS, and the energy savings achievable.

Why scheduling matters more than equipment efficiency

Equipment efficiency improvements (5-star chiller, premium motors) typically yield 10-15% energy reduction. Smart scheduling typically yields 25-35%. Sequencing the two: start with scheduling discipline, then optimize equipment.

Four scheduling strategies

Strategy 1: Time-of-day scheduling (basic)

Cooling on at 6:30 AM (90 min before occupancy); off at 7:30 PM (30 min after); off weekends/holidays.

Energy reduction: 30-40% vs 24/7 operation.

Implementation: BMS clock + day-of-week logic. Most building BMS already supports this.

Indian gotcha: Non-standard occupancy (overnight IT shifts; weekend retail) means the schedule must be customized per building.

Strategy 2: Setpoint setback (intermediate)

Setpoint relaxed during unoccupied hours: 24 °C → 28 °C cooling; 21 °C → 17 °C heating. Equipment runs to maintain the setback temperature, not full design.

Energy reduction: 35-50% vs 24/7 design setpoint.

Implementation: BMS scheduled setpoint reset.

Compromise: Building takes 30-60 min to ramp from setback to occupancy setpoint. Either start ramp early (at expense of energy savings) or accept some morning discomfort.

Strategy 3: Occupancy-detected scheduling (advanced)

PIR / time-of-flight occupancy sensors trigger zone cooling on demand. If conference room is empty for 30 min, zone setpoint setback engages. If meeting starts unexpectedly, sensor detects occupancy + cooling ramps.

Energy reduction: 40-60% in highly variable spaces (conference, meeting rooms).

Implementation: Zone-level PIR/ToF sensors connected to BMS.

Capex: ~₹15-25k per zone for sensor + integration.

Strategy 4: Predictive scheduling (most advanced)

ML model predicts occupancy + sets schedule in advance. Uses calendar data, weather forecast, historical patterns.

Energy reduction: 50-65% in complex buildings (mixed-use, hospitality).

Implementation: AI-augmented BMS (Trane Tracer SC+, JCI Metasys Edge, Honeywell WEBs predictive); typical capex ₹2-5 lakh per building.

BMS programming logic

For a typical Indian office, the scheduling program looks like:


Mon-Fri:
  06:30 - cooling start; ramp to occupancy setpoint by 08:00
  17:30 - 19:00 - setback initiation (28 °C cooling)
  19:00 - cooling off; setback continues (only fans, dehumidification)

Sat:
  09:00 - cooling start (if 50%+ occupancy on Saturdays)
  14:00 - cooling off

Sun + Holidays:
  Cooling off entirely
  Setback only via natural infiltration

Per-zone overrides (if occupancy sensor active):
  Empty 30 min → zone setpoint drops to 27 °C
  Empty 60 min → zone equipment off
  Occupancy detected → zone returns to 24 °C, equipment cycles on

Implementation in commercial BMS: standard scheduling tools handle Strategy 1 + 2 natively. Strategy 3 requires sensor wiring + BMS programming. Strategy 4 requires firmware upgrade or integration with predictive analytics platform.

Energy savings — worked example

5,000 m² Bangalore office:

Without scheduling (24/7 design):

  • Annual energy: 1,500 MWh = ₹15 crore/yr at typical office tariff
  • EUI: 300 kWh/m²/yr

With Strategy 1 (basic time-of-day):

  • Annual energy: 1,000 MWh = ₹10 crore/yr (33% saved)
  • EUI: 200 kWh/m²/yr

With Strategy 2 (setback):

  • Annual energy: 850 MWh = ₹8.5 crore/yr (43% saved)
  • EUI: 170 kWh/m²/yr

With Strategy 3 (occupancy-detected):

  • Annual energy: 750 MWh = ₹7.5 crore/yr (50% saved)
  • EUI: 150 kWh/m²/yr

With Strategy 4 (predictive):

  • Annual energy: 650 MWh = ₹6.5 crore/yr (57% saved)
  • EUI: 130 kWh/m²/yr

For typical 5,000 m² office, savings going from no-scheduling to Strategy 3 = ₹5+ crore/yr. Capex for Strategy 3 ≈ ₹25-40 lakh. Payback < 1 year.

Common scheduling mistakes

1. Defaulting BMS to “always on” — many BMS ship with default 24/7 schedule; never customized for actual occupancy.

2. Setback temperature too aggressive — 30 °C setback in monsoon Mumbai means morning ramp takes 90 min; occupants arrive to hot office.

3. No occupancy sensor for variable spaces — conference rooms running cooling continuously despite 90% empty. Easy savings missed.

4. No holiday/exception calendar — Republic Day cooling running with empty building.

5. No periodic schedule audit — schedule set in 2020 still running in 2026 despite occupancy shifts.

Quick checklist

  • [ ] BMS schedule reviewed quarterly + customized for actual occupancy
  • [ ] Setback engaged 30-60 min before close + lifted 60-90 min before opening
  • [ ] Setback temperature 28 °C (cooling) / 17 °C (heating) acceptable
  • [ ] Occupancy sensors in conference/meeting rooms
  • [ ] Holiday calendar imported into BMS
  • [ ] Annual occupancy survey to validate schedule fit
  • [ ] BMS schedule logged in commissioning documentation

References: ASHRAE 90.1-2022 §6.4.3 (HVAC Controls); ECBC 2017 §5.4 (Controls); ISHRAE Handbook Volume 7 (BMS); ASHRAE Handbook HVAC Apps 2023 Ch 47.

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