Join our network. Make change happen.

GBPN connects like-minded people around the world to research, educate and implement change. Join us today.

CLOSE

Reports

20 result(s) found

Identifying macro-objectives for the life cycle environmental performance and resource efficiency of EU buildings

Working paper
Authors:
Nicholas Dodd,
Shane Donatello,
Elena Garbarino,
Miguel Gama-Caldas

This working paper brings together the findings of the first stage in this study, which focusses on the identification of 'macro-objectives' for the environmental performance of the EU building stock. This stage is intended to provide an initial 'top down' view of what the strategic priorities (the 'macro-objectives') should be for the building sector.

The EnergyFit Homes Initiative Working Paper 8: Home Energy Efficiency Stakeholder Map

Working paper
Authors:
Henry Adams,
Matthew Clark

Executive Summary Scope and objectives This report provides the findings from the stakeholder-mapping stage the EnergyFit Homes Initiative phase 1. The objectives of this phase were to develop a map of the relevant stakeholders and to understand their perspectives of the need, scope and implantation of a national home energy efficiency information framework. A secondary objective of this stage was to begin to build consensus and a coalition of support for options to be built on in the next stage. This is the penultimate research stage of Phase 1.

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.

Level(s) – A common EU framework of core sustainability indicators for office and residential buildings (Part 3)

Technical report
Authors:
Nicholas Dodd,
Mauro Cordella,
Marzia Traverso,
Shane Donatello

This document is the companion to parts 1 and 2 of the guidance on how to use Level(s). In part 1 a general introduction to Level(s) is provided, together with in Part 2 an overview of the macro-objectives, performance indicators and the three Levels of performance assessment (Level(s) - Part 1 and 2). The three Levels are:

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):

Estimating the national carbon abatement potential of city policies: A data-driven approach

Technical report
Authors:
Eric O’Shaughnessy,
Jenny Heeter,
David Keyser,
Pieter Gagnon,
Alexandra Aznar

Cities are increasingly taking actions such as building code enforcement, urban planning, and public transit expansion to reduce emissions of carbon dioxide in their communities and municipal operations. However, many cities lack the quantitative information needed to estimate policy impacts and prioritize city actions in terms of carbon abatement potential and cost effectiveness. This report fills this research gap by providing methodologies to assess the carbon abatement potential of a variety of city actions.

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.

Building code energy performance trajectory: Interim technical report

Technical report
Authors:
Paul Bannister,
Duane Robinson,
Luke Reedman,
Philip Harrington,
Sam Moffitt,
Hongsen Zhang,
Paul Cooper,
Zhenjun Ma,
Laia Ledo Gomis,
Lewis Green

This report is the Interim Technical Report for the Building Code Energy Performance Trajectory Project. It accompanies the Interim Synthesis Report for the Building Code Energy Performance Trajectory Project, entitled The Bottom Line – the household impacts of delaying improved energy requirements in the Building Code and which was published on the 8th of February 2018, providing more detail on the assumptions behind and the preliminary results from the underlying modelling work.

The report provides the following key items:

The distributional effects of building energy codes

Working paper
Authors:
Chris Bruegge,
Tatyana Deryugina,
Erica Myers

State-level building energy codes have been around for over 40 years, but recent empirical research has cast doubt on their effectiveness. A potential virtue of standards-based policies is that they may be less regressive than explicit taxes on energy consumption. However, this conjecture has not been tested empirically in the case of building energy codes.

Pathways to zero energy buildings through building codes

Working paper
Authors:
Christopher Perry

Designers can use superior building design and energy management strategies to create buildings that produce at least as much energy as they consume. These are called zero energy buildings (ZEBs). ZEBs exist in the United States and Canada now; however building energy codes will have to be continuously improved to achieve widespread ZEBs by 2030, a common goal of many cities and some states.

Accelerating building decarbonization: eight attainable policy pathways to net zero carbon buildings for all

Working paper
Authors:
Renilde Becque,
Debbie Weyl,
Emma Stewart,
Eric Mackres,
Luting Jin,
Xufei Shen

Buildings that emit no greenhouse gas emissions during their operation are vital to meeting the SDGs and Paris Agreement targets. But in the past, zero carbon buildings have been assumed to be only attainable by technologically advanced or wealthy countries. New WRI research finds there are policy pathways to reach zero carbon buildings regardless of location or development status. The report identifies eight pathways countries can take to reach zero carbon buildings by reducing energy demand and cleaning energy supply.

Final energy savings analysis of the proposed NYStretch-Energy Code 2018

Technical report
Authors:
Yan Chen,
Bing Liu,
Jian Zhang,
Michael Rosenberg,
Jim Edelson,
Mark Lyles

In 2017, New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA) developed its 2016 Stretch Code Supplement to the 2016 New York State Energy Conservation Construction Code. Since 2017, NYSERDA has continued to develop the 2018 edition, as part of the efforts to achieve a statewide Net Zero Energy Code by 2028.

Residential building codes do save energy: evidence from hourly smart-meter data

Working paper
Authors:
Kevin Novan,
Aaron Smith,
Tianxia Zhou

In 1978, California adopted building codes designed to reduce the energy used for heating, cooling, and water heating in buildings. Using a rich dataset of hourly electricity consumption for 158,112 California houses during 2012-13, this paper estimates that single-family homes built from 1980 through 1982 consumed on average 13% less electricity for cooling than premises constructed between 1975 through 1977. This estimate is similar to projected cooling-energy savings made using engineering models at the time the codes were enacted.

Validating and improving the BASIX energy assessment tool for low-carbon dwellings: final report

Technical report
Authors:
Lan Ding,
Anir Kumar Upadhyay,
William Craft,
Komali Yenneti,
Marini Samaratunga,
Krishna Munsami,
Deo Prasad

This report is a product of the collaborative research project ‘Validating and Improving the BASIX Assessment Tool for Low-Carbon Dwellings’. Initiated by the Cooperative Research Centre for Low Carbon Living, the University of New South Wales (UNSW) and the New South Wales Government, this project addresses the policy need for post-occupancy evaluation of the BASIX tool by measuring the actual energy consumption of BASIX-compliant dwellings.

Pedoman Teknis Penyelenggaraan Bangunan Gedung Hijau Dalam Rangka Implementasi Bali Energi Bersih Di Provinsi Bali

Technical report
Malay (inc. Indonesian and Malaysian)
Authors:
Ida Bagus Setiawan, Provinsi Bali,
Nusakti Yasa Wedha, Provinsi Bali,
Ida Bagus Gede Sudarsana, Provinsi Bali,
Ida Ayu Dwi Giriantari, CORE,
I Nyoman Satya Kumara, CORE,
Wayan Gede Ariastina, CORE,
I Nyoman Setiawan, CORE,
I Wayan Sukerayasa, CORE,
Matthieu Caille, GBPN,
Jatmika Suryabrata, GBPN,
Yeni Indra, GBPN,
Sandra Pranoto, GBPN,
Craig Burton, GBPN,
Peter Graham, GBPN

The Bali Province Technical Guidelines (written in Indonesian) for Implementing Green Buildings in the Context of Clean Energy represent a collaborative effort between the Bali Provincial Government, Global Building Performance Network (GBPN), and support from CORE Udayana. Developed through extensive studies and analysis from November 2021 to June 2022, the guidelines engage stakeholders from the Provincial Government Bali, Professional Expert Team, universities, associations, private sectors, and professionals in building and clean energy.

PEDOMAN TEKNIS Implementasi Peraturan Wali Kota Nomor 55 Tahun 2021 Tentang Efisiensi Penggunaan Energi Listrik dan Efisiensi Penggunaan Air pada Bangunan Gedung

Technical report
Malay (inc. Indonesian and Malaysian)
Authors:
Ir. H. Hero Mardanus Satyawan, MT,
Desy Damayanti, ST, MT,
Hj. Nurrahmani, S.IP, MM,
H. Eko Suprayetno, S.Sos,
Muhammad Cecep Herly, ST, MT,
Idfi Septiani, S.STP, M.Si,
Andriani,ST,M.Si,
Matthieu Caille, GBPN,
Jatmika Suryabrata, GBPN,
Yeni Indra, GBPN,
Sandra Pranoto, GBPN,
Craig Burton, GBPN,
Peter Graham, GBPN

The Samarinda City Technical Guidelines represent a strategic initiative aligned with the city's development goals, as outlined in Mayor Regulation No. 55 of 2021. These guidelines meticulously consider the potential savings and additional benefits achievable through the implementation of energy and water-efficient measures, aiming to significantly reduce carbon emissions in buildings. Spearheaded by the Samarinda City Government, this effort reflects a commitment to fostering an environmentally friendly and sustainable urban landscape.

Search

CLOSE