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Reports

28 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.

APEC green building code infrastructure guide

Guide
Authors:
Renee Hancher

The Asia-Pacific region has experienced significant growth in its green building market. APEC members have supported a number of related activities over recent years to advance building rating systems, promote life-cycle analysis for products and materials, and document policies regulating building design and construction. The common goal of these efforts is to work toward a sustainable built environment supported by the free flow of trade in products and technologies.

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.

Tools for energy efficiency in buildings: a guide for policy-makers and experts

Guide
Authors:
Ksenia Petrichenko,
Nate Aden,
Aristeidis Tsakiris

Without strong and ambitious policy support, the energy efficiency potential of cities is likely to remain largely untapped. Often cities have the opportunity to implement policies and programmes in the building sector that are complementary, more stringent or reflect greater ambition than national activities. 

Best practices in developing energy efficiency programs for low-income communities and considerations for clean power plan compliance

Guide
Authors:
Mary Shoemaker

This is the third in a series of papers intended to guide states as they embark on the path to Clean Power Plan (CPP) compliance. As one of many approaches to reducing pollution and complying with the CPP, states and localities can offer energy efficiency programs to low-income households or businesses and community-based organizations that serve low-income communities. This guide discusses some best practices for implementing and evaluating low-income energy efficiency programs and addresses considerations in using them for CPP compliance.

A Guidebook For the development of Nationally Appropriate Mitigation Actions (NAMAs)

Guide
Authors:
Soren Lutken,
Maryna Henrysson,
Ksenia Petrichenko,
Mei Ting Phang,
Sudhir Sharma

This guidebook aims to be a practical resource for governments (ministries of energy, environment, housing, climate change, finance, planning and others), private sector investors and civil society organizations by illustrating how to create a Nationally Appropriate Mitigation Action (NAMA) for energy efficient buildings based on a country-led national strategy, possibly articulated as a Nationally Determined Contribution.

Building energy code toolkit

Guide
Authors:
Meredydd Evans,
L. Jin,
Mark Halverson,
Qing Tan,
Sha Yu

This toolkit is designed as a first step in helping countries, cities and experts in developing, adopting and implementing their codes. In its present form, this toolkit is set out as a useful reference, but also as a means of assessing the potential of such information to help governments and other stakeholders. The toolkit covers five main topics: guidance for cities and jurisdictions that are just getting started, and tools that can provide inspiration and knowledge regarding code development, adoption, implementation and evaluation.

Framework guidelines for energy efficiency standards in buildings

Guide
Authors:
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe

Buildings are central to meeting the sustainability challenge. In the developed world, buildings consume over 70% of the electrical power generated and 40% of primary energy, and are responsible for 40% of CO2 emissions from combustion. While developing countries will need to accommodate 2.4 billion new urban residents by 2050, in Europe 75-90% of buildings standing today are expected to remain in use in 2050. Renewable energy technology alone cannot meet those requirements, despite recent improvements.

Distributed energy in the property sector — today’s opportunities

Guide
Authors:
Clean Energy Finance Corporation (CEFC),
Property Council of Australia

More and more large energy users across Australia are exploring distributed energy solutions to reduce costs, lower their exposure to volatile energy markets and drive down carbon emissions. With opportunities such as generating electricity on site using solar PV and load management through the use of batteries, corporates can take a far more active and strategic role in energy management.

Central Melbourne design guide: draft for exhibition

Guide
Authors:
City of Melbourne

The Central Melbourne design guide has been prepared by the City of Melbourne to support the use and interpretation of the Urban Design in the Central City and Southbank Design and Development Overlay Schedule 1 (DDO1) within the Melbourne Planning Scheme. The guide is intended to raise the bar on the design quality of development outcomes in the Central City and Southbank.

Moving energy codes forward: a guide for cities and states

Guide
Authors:
New Buildings Institute

Residential and commercial buildings accounted for over 2,000 Million Metric Tons (MMT) of carbon equivalent emissions and 40% of the total energy consumed in the United States in 2016. New construction and major renovations in buildings have a long-term impact on emissions as many of the features incorporated at time of construction will impact energy consumption for decades.

NCC Volume one: Energy efficiency provisions

Guide
Authors:
Australian Building Codes Board

The Australian Building Codes Board (ABCB) and the former Australian Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts (DEWHA) developed this Handbook to assist users with the application and understanding of the National Construction Code (NCC) Volume One energy efficiency provisions.

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.

Maximising your investment: using rating tools to attract sustainable finance for real estate

Guide
Authors:
National Australian Built Environment Rating System (NABERS),
Green Building Council of Australia,
Global Real Estate Sustainability Benchmark,
Climate Bonds Initiative

Sustainable finance has been an area of interest to the National Australian Built Environment Rating System (NABERS) for some time. NABERS have been closely monitoring green bond issuances in the property sector and are encouraged by the uptake of sustainable finance solutions many customers are pursuing. NABERS want to see more green finance unlocked in the industry.

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.

Guide to low carbon residential buildings – retrofit

Guide
Authors:
Michael Whitehouse,
Paul Osmond,
Daniel Daly,
Georgios Kokogiannakis,
Daniel Jones,
Alex Picard-Bromilow,
Paul Cooper

It is a response to an increasing need to address carbon emissions from existing residential buildings. Historically, policy on reducing carbon emissions has focused on regulating new-build projects; however, with less than 2% of the building stock in Australia replaced each year, there is a clear need to reduce carbon emissions in homes that have already been built and occupied.

Guide to low carbon commercial buildings – new build

Guide
Authors:
Remy Augros,
Ian Dixon,
Philip Oldfield,
Lester Partridge,
Ben Slee,
Konstantina Vasilakopoulou

This guide acts as a practical reference for the design of high-performance, low-carbon commercial buildings. The target audience is everyone involved in the creation of new commercial buildings, from architects, consultants and designers, to developers and owners.

Water audit guidance for commercial buildings

Guide
Authors:
City Energy Project

Energy audits have been conducted for many years, and there is a well-established cohort of service providers trained to perform them in accordance with standards developed by ASHRAE and others. These standards define the process and quality of work that should be achieved for energy performance audits. However, a corresponding level of industry maturity, and an understanding of what should be included, does not yet exist for auditing water performance.

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