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Reports

14 result(s) found

Increasing residential building energy efficiency in China: An evaluation of policy instruments

Discussion paper
Authors:
Xiaoqi Xu,
Laura Diaz Anadon,
Henry Lee

Various policies targeting at building energy efficiency have been promulgated by the Chinese government in the past decade. However, few studies evaluate if China is on the right path to meet its energy goals through these policies by providing an assessment of their effect in reducing energy consumption in residential buildings or the feasibility of such policies to catalyze these reductions.

Building energy performance standards project: issues paper

Discussion paper
Authors:
Australian Sustainable Built Environment Council

Australia’s current national emissions reduction target is to reduce emissions to 26-28 per cent below 2005 levels by 2030. As a signatory to the Paris Agreement, Australia has committed to the goal of reducing global emissions to net zero emissions and to five yearly reviews of the national target starting from 2020, with the requirement that new pledges be higher than the previous pledge and reflect the highest possible level of ambition.

Smart Buildings in a Decarbonised Energy System

Discussion paper
Authors:
Maarten De Groote,
Mariangiola Fabbri,
Jonathan Volt,
Oliver Rapf

Buildings can balance the grid through proactive energy demand management and can play a leading role in transforming the EU energy market, shifting from centralised, fossil-fuel-based systems towards a decentralised, renewable, interconnected and variable system. Many actors agree that buildings have a role in shaping the Energy Market Design Initiative.

Buying green! A handbook on green public procurement

Book
Authors:
European Commission

Green Public Procurement (GPP) is an important tool to achieve environmental policy goals relating to climate change, resource use and sustainable consumption and production – especially given the importance of public sector spending on goods and services in Europe.

Shaping residential sector energy performance

Book
Authors:
Michael MacDonald

Energy is a complicated topic, and energy performance can also be challenging to determine. This book is about understanding and shaping energy performance of an entire economic sector, using the residential sector as the example, although not at a detailed level. The historical record of attempts to reduce energy use or carbon emissions of countries and the world is primarily one of failure. Should the response to continued failure be to continue to do more of the same? Insanity is sometimes defined in such a manner.

Good practice and success stories on energy efficiency in China

Book
Authors:
Xianli Zhu,
Quan Bai,
Xiliang Zhang,
Zhiyu Tian,
Jianguo Zhang,
Wenjing Yi

China has made energy conservation and energy efficiency one of its top priorities as a means of guiding its economic and social development. In the past three decades, while China’s economy increased eighteen‑fold, energy consumption increased only five‑fold. The energy intensity of China’s GDP declined by about seventy percent during the same period. In the face of resource and environmental constraints, China vowed to make energy conservation a foundation of its economic and social development strategy, as well as its energy and climate change strategy.

Green growth indicators 2017

Book
Authors:
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD)

Policies that promote green growth need to be founded on a good understanding of the determinants of green growth and need to be supported with appropriate indicators to monitor progress. This book is an update of the 2014 edition.

Delivering the quality of growth to which citizens aspire requires concerted action across countries and within ministries invested in green growth – finance, economy, industry, trade and agriculture, among others.

Energy renovation: it’s time for a paradigm shift in policy design!

Discussion paper
Authors:
Yamina Saheb

The “Clean Energy for All Europeans” package confirms the pivotal role of the EU building stock in meeting EU 2030 climate and energy targets. In fact, the projected decarbonisation of the EU energy system is mainly based on the renovation of existing buildings and the increased penetration of renewable energies in heating, cooling and power generation.

Enhancing energy efficiency in China: assessment of sectoral potentials

Book
Authors:
Zhiyu Tian,
Xiliang Zhang,
Xianli Zhu,
Quan Bai,
Guanyun Fu,
Jingru Liu,
Qingbing Pei,
Yuyan Weng,
Huawen Xiong,
Wenjing Yi,
Jianguo Zhang,
Sheng Zhou

This book uses energy and economic models to assess the potential for further energy-efficient improvements in the transport, building, industry and power sectors of China. The report starts with a modelling assessment of the role of energy efficiency in supporting China to achieve its Intended Nationally Determined Contribution (INDC) of reaching a peak in its greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by around 2030.

Enhancing energy efficiency in India: assessment of sectoral potentials

Book
Authors:
Saritha S. Vishwanathan,
Amit Garg,
Vineet Tiwari,
Bhushan Kankal,
Manmohan Kapshe,
Tirthankar Nag

Economic development will lead to higher demand for various end-use goods and services in India. Energy-efficient technologies provide a way forward to achieve economic growth at relatively lower costs due to associated multiple benefits such as resource conservation, lower energy consumption, higher productivity and lower emissions intensity per unit of output.

The report undertakes the following analysis to identify High Impact Opportunities (HIOs):

Good practice and success stories on energy efficiency in India

Book
Authors:
Amit Garg,
Subash Dhar,
Bhushan Kankal,
Pankaj Mohan,
Manmohan Kapshe,
Saurabh Kumar,
Tirthankar Nag,
Jyoti Painuly,
Saket Shukla

The growing per capita income in India is expected to increase the demand for various energy-consuming products and services among Indian households. Enhancing energy efficiency remains one of the cheapest options to “produce” energy in India, as the efficiency of many energy systems has a large scope for improvement, and as this option plays an important part in enhancing India’s energy security.

Solar feed-in tariffs - the value of electricity from small-scale solar panels in 2018-19: issues paper

Discussion paper
Authors:
Independent Pricing and Regulatory Tribunal (NSW)

In NSW more than 10% of households and small business premises have installed a solar photovoltaic (PV) system (commonly called solar panels). When these solar customers use the electricity generated by their solar panels rather than buying electricity from their retailer, they save money. When they don’t use all this electricity themselves, the excess amount is exported to the grid, and they may be paid a ‘solar feed-in tariff’ for this electricity.

The zero carbon and circular economy challenge in the built environment: policy options for the European Union and its member states

Discussion paper
Authors:
Oliver Rapf

This paper on the zero carbon and circular challenge in the built environment puts forward several policy recommendations. In order to achieve the net-zero carbon goal by 2050, adapting the built environment is paramount: the EU estimates that the climate change-related damage to infrastructure could grow tenfold under a business-as-usual scenario. The paper advocates the need to come up with a comprehensive strategy for the building and construction sector which should build on the principles of sustainability and circularity.

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