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Reports

44 result(s) found

EROI of different fuels and the implications for society

Journal article
Authors:
Charles A. Hall,
Jessica Lambert,
Stephen Balogh

Abstract: All forms of economic production and exchange involve the use of energy directly and in the transformation of materials. Until recently, cheap and seemingly limitless fossil energy has allowed most of society to ignore the importance of contributions to the economic process from the biophysical world as well as the potential limits to growth. This paper centres on assessing the energy costs of modern day society and its relation to GDP.

Energy efficiency of housing for older citizens: does it matter?

Journal article
Authors:
Wendy Miller,
Desley Vine,
Zakaria Amin

Global population ageing has significant implications for public policy in areas such as health, housing and economic security. The notion of housing as a public health issue is not new, yet very little research has examined the links between housing specifically built for older people, energy performance and occupant health and economic security.

Carbon reductions and health co-benefits from US residential energy efficiency measures

Journal article
Authors:
Jonathan Levy,
May K. Woo,
Stefani L. Penn,
Mohammad Omary,
Yann Tambouret,
Chloe S. Kim,
Saravanan Arunachalam

The United States (US) Clean Power Plan established state-specific carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions reduction goals for fossil fuel-fired electricity generating units (EGUs). States may achieve these goals through multiple mechanisms, including measures that can achieve equivalent CO2 reductions such as residential energy efficiency, which will have important co-benefits. Here, we develop state-resolution simulations of the economic, health, and climate benefits of increased residential insulation, considering EGUs and residential combustion.

Measures to enforce mandatory civil building energy efficiency codes in China

Journal article
Authors:
Qiang Guo,
Yong Wu,
Yan Ding,
Wei Feng,
Neng Zhu

Mandatory civil building energy efficiency codes strictly govern the energy consumption of new buildings in China. As the promotion of building energy efficiency in China has increased in recent years, compliance with mandatory civil building energy efficiency codes has also improved, increasing from less than 10% in 2000 to nearly 100% in 2012, a remarkable achievement. However, because the promotion of energy efficiency strategies in China has followed a unique pattern, some researchers doubt these statistics.

Building governance and climate change: roles for regulation and related polices

Journal article
Authors:
Henk Visscher,
Jacques Laubscher,
Edwin Chan

The contribution of buildings to climate change has become widely acknowledged. On 3 December 2015, the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) held the first ‘buildings day’ at COP 21 (the UN Climate Change Conference) devoted to the decarbonization of the building stock. There are several forms of negative contributions that buildings make to climate change, but high on the list are embodied and operational energy demands, which largely depend on fossil fuels and result in greenhouse gas emissions.

How much energy do building energy codes save? Evidence from California houses

Journal article
Authors:
Arik Levinson

Regulations governing the energy efficiency of new buildings have become a cornerstone of US environmental policy. California enacted the first such codes in 1978 and has tightened them every few years since. I evaluate the resulting energy savings three ways: comparing energy used by houses constructed under different standards, controlling for building and occupant characteristics; examining how energy use varies with outdoor temperatures; and comparing energy used by houses of different vintages in California to that same difference in other states.

Analysis of existing building energy saving policies in Japan and China

Journal article
Authors:
Beijia Huang,
Volker Mauerhofer,
Yong Geng

Building sector accounts for a large percentage of the total national energy consumption in most of the countries, thus it is critical to formulate and implement appropriate energy saving policies in the building sector. This paper focuses on energy saving policies in the building sector by conducting a comparative study between Japan and China. The exiting Building Energy Saving (BES) policies, actual effectiveness of policy implementation and obstacles to the effective policy implementation are compared in sequence.

Climate co-benefits of green building standards: water, waste and transportation

Journal article
Authors:
William Eisenstein,
Gwen Fuertes,
Soazig Kaam,
Kimberley Seigel,
Edward Arens,
Louise Mozingo

This paper quantifies the greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions co-benefits associated with water, waste and transportation usage in certified green commercial office buildings in California. The study compares the measured values of water, waste and transportation usage self-reported by office buildings certified under the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design rating system for Existing Building Operations and Maintenance (LEED EBOM) to baseline values of conventional California office buildings.

Cost-optimal energy efficiency levels are the first step in achieving cost effective renovation in residential buildings with a nearly-zero energy target

Journal article
Authors:
Marco Ferreira,
Manuela Almeida,
Ana Rodrigues

In Europe, the latest updates in the directive on the energy performance of buildings introduced two fundamental concepts, namely the cost-optimal energy requirements and the nearly-zero energy buildings (nZEB). Although these concepts are related, the cost-optimal is focused on costs while the nZEB prioritise the energy performance and the use of renewable energy harvested on site.

Energy performance gaps: promises, people, practices

Journal article
Authors:
Kirsten Gram-Hanssen,
Susse Georg

Energy policy continues not to acknowledge the gap between the calculated (i.e. the anticipated or promised) and the actual consumption associated with peoples’ everyday practices in their homes and in the building sector. Multiple explanations exist for why this ‘performance gap’ occurs.

A review of studies on green building assessment methods by comparative analysis

Journal article
Authors:
Yuanyuan Li,
Xiaochen Chen,
Xiaoyu Wang,
Youquan Xu,
Po-Han Chen

Green building assessment methods, which play an essential role in promoting the development of greenbuildings, have attracted much attention in recent years. Many studies have been conducted on the development of new assessment methods and improvement of existing ones through comparative analysis. However, there is no comprehensive study that explicitly explores these efforts. For this purpose, a systematic review of the existing literature on green building assessment methods through comparative analysis is carried out in this paper.

Global scenarios of urban density and its impacts on building energy use through 2050

Journal article
Authors:
Burak Guneralp,
Yuyu Zhou,
Diana Ürge-Vorsatz,
Mukesh Gupta,
Sha Yu,
Pralit Patel,
Michail Fragkias,
Xiaoma Li,
Karen Seto

Urban density significantly impacts urban energy use and the quality of life of urban residents. Here, the authors provide a global-scale analysis of future urban densities and associated energy use in the built environment under different urbanization scenarios. The relative importance of urban density and energy-efficient technologies varies geographically. In developing regions, urban density tends to be the more critical factor in building energy use.

Post-occupancy energy consumption of BASIX affected dwellings in the Sydney metropolitan area

Journal article
Authors:
Anir Kumar Upadhyay,
Lan Ding,
Kevin Yee,
Deo Prasad

Australian residential sector contributes approximately 13 per cent of the total greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. The New South Wales (NSW) government in Australia has introduced mandatory energy efficiency/ GHG emissions reduction target through the Building Sustainability Index (BASIX) assessment tool, which estimates the operational energy consumption and GHG emissions from new residential developments based on information available at the building design stage.

Developing policies and programmes for green buildings: What can Nigeria learn from Malaysia's experience?

Journal article
Authors:
Iheanyichukwu Joachim Onuoha,
Norhaya Kamarudin,
Godwin Uche Aliagha,
S. A. Okeahialam,
Moses Idowu Atilola,
Fidelis Osagie Atamamen

Nigerian government has begun to develop plans that will address green buildings and environmental sustainability, a matter and issue on which Malaysia has wide-ranging experiences. Through a comparative study on green building policies in Malaysia and Nigeria, the study identified important lessons relevant to Nigeria green building policies and programmes and creates a general explanation of Malaysia green building policies that could be applicable to Nigeria.

Developing policies for green buildings: what can the United States learn from the Netherlands?

Journal article
Authors:
Rebecca Retzlaff

Political jurisdictions in the United States have begun to develop plans that address green buildings, a topic on which the Netherlands has extensive experience. This article analyzes the literature on Dutch green buildings to look for lessons that might be relevant for the development of polices in the United States. Through a metasynthesis of seventeen studies on green building policies in the Netherlands, the study identifies patterns in the literature and creates a holistic interpretation.

Green shift to sustainability

Journal article
Authors:
R. Andreas Kraemer

Energy transformation towards 100% renewable energy is economically inevitable, and socially and environmentally desirable, yet it may produce negative signals in outdated statistics as fossil trade diminishes and the sector shrinks. This paradox on should be addressed in a joint report by, e.g., IRENA, IMF, OECD, andthe World Bank, and the Task Force on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures. Fossil fuel extraction and commodity trade will end, and fossil asset values erode.

Modelling and analysis of post-occupancy behaviour in residential buildings to inform BASIX sustainability assessments in NSW

Journal article
Authors:
Marini Samaratunga,
Lan Ding,
Kate Bishop,
Deo Prasad,
Kevin Yee

Sustainability assessment tools aim to promote high sustainability outcomes in residential buildings, ensuring less consumption of water, energy and less emission of greenhouse gases. However, existing literature often presents variations between the estimated outcomes from the assessment tools and actual outcomes after building occupation. Research suggests that actual energy consumption could be significantly influenced by resident behaviour in addition to the dwelling conditions and the energy efficiency of appliances.

The rationale for energy efficiency policy: assessing the recognition of the multiple benefits of energy efficiency retrofit policy

Journal article
Authors:
Niall Kerr,
Andy Douldson,
John Barrett

The rationale for energy efficiency policy can be framed in terms of a variety of different benefits. This paper considers how different benefits have been used within the overall rationale for energy efficient retrofit policy in different contexts. We posit that different rationales may be used for the same policy response, and that the form of rationale used may affect the design, delivery or the level of policy support, with different rationales making it easier to account for different results.

Impact of co-benefits on the assessment of energy related building renovation with a nearly-zero energy target

Journal article
Authors:
Marco Ferreira,
Manuela Almeida,
Ana Rodrigues

The reduction of the energy consumption and carbon emissions in the building sector is an important target for actions to mitigate the climate changes and different actions are being carried out to promote a transition to a low carbon built environment. However, present standards are mainly focused on new buildings which may result counter-productive in existing ones, due to their technical, functional and economic constraints.

Adaptive reuse of Sydney offices and sustainability

Journal article
Authors:
Sarah Jane Wilkinson,
Hilde Remoy

The built environment contributes 40% of total global greenhouse gas emissions and 87% of the buildings we will have in 2050 are already built. If predicted climate changes are correct, we need to adapt existing stock sustainably. Outside Australia there is a history of office to residential conversions. These conversions number few in Sydney although evidence suggests a trend is emerging in conversion adaptations.

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