建筑能效:最佳实践政策和“一揽子”政策
本报告通过对中国、欧盟国家、印度和美国在建筑能源规范、建筑能源标识以及金融工具方面进行系统回顾,提出并总结了这四个地区的经验和最佳实践以供各方参考学习。
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本报告通过对中国、欧盟国家、印度和美国在建筑能源规范、建筑能源标识以及金融工具方面进行系统回顾,提出并总结了这四个地区的经验和最佳实践以供各方参考学习。
本报告通过对中国、欧盟国家、印度和美国在建筑能源规范、建筑能源标识以及金融工具方面进行系统回顾,提出并总结了这四个地区的经验和最佳实践以供各方参考学习。
Highlight
A systematic review of building energy codes, energy labels and financial instruments in China, the EU, India and the USA, offering an insight into shared experiences and best practices in those regions.
Extended Summary
A systematic review of building energy codes, energy labels and financial instruments in China, the EU, India and the USA, offering an insight into shared experiences and best practices in those regions.
本报告通过对中国、欧盟国家、印度和美国在建筑能源规范、建筑能源标识以及金融工具方面进行系统回顾,提出并总结了这四个地区的经验和最佳实践以供各方参考学习。
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第一份用英文详尽阐述的关于中国建筑节能政策研究的国际报告。
第一份用英文详尽阐述的关于中国建筑节能政策研究的国际报告。
第一份用英文详尽阐述的关于中国建筑节能政策研究的国际报告。
The first report issued internationally that provides a comprehensive English summary of Chinese studies on building energy efficiency policies in China.
This report is available in both English and Mandarin.
为比较建筑节能规范的最佳实践方法开发了第一套客观的衡量准则。
Energy use in buildings is responsible for more than 30% of global CO2 emissions and has a significant role to play in climate change mitigation, given the large potential savings in both new and existing buildings.
为比较建筑节能规范的最佳实践方法开发了第一套客观的衡量准则。
为比较建筑节能规范的最佳实践方法开发了第一套客观的衡量准则。
A new Policy Paper released today by GBPN and the Institute for Market Transformation (IMT), the GBPN US Hub, highlights the importance to link energy codes and benchmarking and disclosure policies if we want to reduce building energy consumption.
The new Policy Paper released today captures the main findings of the dialogue initiated by the GBPN with practitioners and international code experts on the design and implementation of best practice building codes.
The International Partnership for Energy Efficiency Cooperation (IPEEC), in partnership with the Global Building Performance Network (GBPN) and Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL), recently completed a new report on key areas for international collaboration on building energy code implementation.
This report presents the outcomes of a pilot study exploring how the building and planning system is delivering a sustainable built environment in Australia. It identifies four key issues emerging from the research highlighting both the challenges and opportunities in implementing ESD in the built environment in the Victorian context. These are: 1) the gap between the planning and building system; 2) weaknesses in the planning system; 3) governance, inconsistencies, and coordination; and 4) improving the system – networks and advocacy.
This study examines the sources of evidence that influence decision-makers who design or develop office buildings, and aims to explain why some managers engage more in evidence-based practice (EBP) than others. A mixed methods approach is conducted that combines quantitative results from 187 senior managers in the built environment and qualitative data from 18 interviewees. The respondents evaluated the use and trustworthiness of different sources of evidence, followed by an assessment of practitioners’ adoption and understanding of EBP.
The existing residential building stock accounts for a substantial portion of worldwide energy consumption and greenhouse emissions. Improvements to the thermal performance of existing buildings is a vital activity to mitigate climate change, and often has additional benefits in the form of improved comfort, health and well-being for occupants. Despite the extensive body of literature in this area, it remains a difficult task to assess the performance of retrofit packages in occupied residential buildings.
The review of policies being implemented in China, the EU, India and the US presented in this report has also identified some key challenges that we must address if we are going to realize the mitigation potential of the building sector. Chief among these is the need to improve our monitoring of the impact that our policies are having. Lack of measured and verifiable data on the influence of policies on building energy performance currently hampers our ability to assess and continuously improve their effectiveness.