Application of Energy Efficiency
Modern appliances, such as, freezers, ovens, stoves,
dishwashers, and clothes washers and dryers, use significantly less energy than
older appliances. Installing a clothesline will significantly reduce one's
energy consumption as their dryer will be used less. Current energy efficient
refrigerators, for example, use 40 percent less energy than conventional models
did in 2001. Following this, if all households in Europe changed their more
than ten-year-old appliances into new ones, 20 billion kWh of electricity would
be saved annually, hence reducing CO2 emissions by almost 18 billion kg. In the
US, the corresponding figures would be 17 billion kWh of electricity and 27,000,000,000
lb (1.2×1010 kg) CO2. According to a 2009 study from McKinsey & Company the
replacement of old appliances is one of the most efficient global measures to
reduce emissions of greenhouse gases. Modern power management systems also
reduce energy usage by idle appliances by turning them off or putting them into
a low-energy mode after a certain time. Many countries identify
energy-efficient appliances using energy input labeling.
The impact of energy efficiency on peak demand depends on
when the appliance is used. For example, an air conditioner uses more energy
during the afternoon when it is hot. Therefore, an energy efficient air
conditioner will have a larger impact on peak demand than off-peak demand. An
energy efficient dishwasher, on the other hand, uses more energy during the
late evening when people do their dishes. This appliance may have little to no
impact on peak demand
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Building Design
Buildings are an important field for energy efficiency
improvements around the world because of their role as a major energy consumer.
However, the question of energy use in buildings is not straightforward as the
indoor conditions that can be achieved with energy use vary a lot. The measures
that keep buildings comfortable, lighting, heating, cooling and ventilation,
all consume energy. Typically the level of energy efficiency in a building is
measured by dividing energy consumed with the floor area of the building which
is referred to as specific energy consumption (SEC) or energy use intensity
(EUI)
However, the issue is more complex as building materials
have embodied energy in them. On the other hand, energy can be recovered from
the materials when the building is dismantled by reusing materials or burning
them for energy. Moreover, when the building is used, the indoor conditions can
vary resulting in higher and lower quality indoor environments. Finally,
overall efficiency is affected by the use of the building: is the building
occupied most of the time and are spaces efficiently used — or is the building
largely empty? It has even been suggested that for a more complete accounting
of energy efficiency, SEC should be amended to include these factors.-
Thus a balanced approach to energy efficiency in buildings
should be more comprehensive than simply trying to minimize energy consumed.
Issues such as quality of indoor environment and efficiency of space use should
be factored in. Thus the measures used to improve energy efficiency can take
many different forms. Often they include passive measures that inherently
reduce the need to use energy, such as better insulation. Many serve various
functions improving the indoor conditions as well as reducing energy use, such
as increased use of natural light.
A building’s location and surroundings play a key role in
regulating its temperature and illumination. For example, trees, landscaping,
and hills can provide shade and block wind. In cooler climates, designing
northern hemisphere buildings with south facing windows and southern hemisphere
buildings with north facing windows increases the amount of sun (ultimately
heat energy) entering the building, minimizing energy use, by maximizing
passive solar heating. Tight building design, including energy-efficient
windows, well-sealed doors, and additional thermal insulation of walls,
basement slabs, and foundations can reduce heat loss by 25 to 50 percent.
Dark roofs may become up to 39 °C (70 °F) hotter than the
most reflective white surfaces. They transmit some of this additional heat
inside the building. US Studies have shown that lightly colored roofs use 40
percent less energy for cooling than buildings with darker roofs. White roof
systems save more energy in sunnier climates. Advanced electronic heating and
cooling systems can moderate energy consumption and improve the comfort of
people in the building.[15]
Proper placement of windows and skylights as well as the use
of architectural features that reflect light into a building can reduce the
need for artificial lighting. Increased use of natural and task lighting has
been shown by one study to increase productivity in schools and offices.[15]
Compact fluorescent lights use two-thirds less energy and may last 6 to 10
times longer than incandescent light bulbs. Newer fluorescent lights produce a
natural light, and in most applications they are cost effective, despite their
higher initial cost, with payback periods as low as a few months.
BMS integration
Effective energy-efficient building design can include the
use of low cost Passive Infra Reds (PIRs) to switch-off lighting when areas are
unnoccupied such as toilets, corridors or even office areas out-of-hours. In
addition, lux levels can be monitored using daylight sensors linked to the
building's lighting scheme to switch on/off or dim the lighting to pre-defined
levels to take into account the natural light and thus reduce consumption.
Building Management Systems (BMS) link all of this together in one centralised
computer to control the whole building's lighting and power requirements.
In an analysis that integrates a residential bottom-up
simulation with an economic multi-sector model, it has been shown that variable
heat gains caused by insulation and air-conditioning efficiency can have
load-shifting effects that are not uniform on the electricity load. The study
also highlighted the impact of higher household efficiency on the power
generation capacity choices that are made by the power sector.
The choice of which space heating or cooling technology to
use in buildings can have a significant impact on energy use and efficiency.
For example, replacing an older 50% efficient natural gas furnace with a new
95% efficient one will dramatically reduce energy use, carbon emissions, and
winter natural gas bills. Ground source heat pumps can be even more energy
efficient and cost effective. These systems use pumps and compressors to move
refrigerant fluid around a thermodynamic cycle in order to "pump"
heat against its natural flow from hot to cold, for the purpose of transferring
heat into a building from the large thermal reservoir contained within the
nearby ground. The end result is that heat pumps typically use four times less
electrical energy to deliver an equivalent amount of heat than a direct
electrical heater does. Another advantage of a ground source heat pump is that
it can be reversed in summertime and operate to cool the air by transferring
heat from the building to the ground. The disadvantage of ground source heat
pumps is their high initial capital cost, but this is typically recouped within
five to ten years as a result of lower energy use.
Smart meters are slowly being adopted by the commercial
sector to highlight to staff and for internal monitoring purposes the
building's energy usage in a dynamic presentable format. The use of Power
Quality Analysers can be introduced into an existing building to assess usage,
harmonic distortion, peaks, swells and interruptions amongst others to
ultimately make the building more energy-efficient. Often such meters
communicate by using wireless sensor networks.
Green Building XML (gbXML) is an emerging schema, a subset
of the Building Information Modeling efforts, focused on green building design
and operation. gbXML is used as input in several energy simulation engines. But
with the development of modern computer technology, a large number of building
energy simulation tools are available on the market. When choosing which
simulation tool to use in a project, the user must consider the tool's accuracy
and reliability, considering the building information they have at hand, which
will serve as input for the tool. Yezioro, Dong and Leite developed an
artificial intelligence approach towards assessing building performance
simulation results and found that more detailed simulation tools have the best
simulation performance in terms of heating and cooling electricity consumption
within 3% of mean absolute error.
Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) is a
rating system organized by the US Green Building Council (USGBC) to promote
environmental responsibility in building design. They currently offer four
levels of certification for existing buildings (LEED-EBOM) and new construction
(LEED-NC) based on a building's compliance with the following criteria:
Sustainable Sites, Water Efficiency, Energy and Atmosphere, Materials and
Resources, Indoor Environmental Quality, and Innovation in Design. In 2013,
USGBC developed the LEED Dynamic Plaque, a tool to track building performance
against LEED metrics and a potential path to recertification. The following
year, the council collaborated with Honeywell to pull data on energy and water
use, as well as indoor air quality from a BAS to automatically update the
plaque, providing a near-real-time view of performance. The USGBC office in
Washington, D.C. is one of the first buildings to feature the live-updating
LEED Dynamic Plaque.
A deep energy retrofit is a whole-building analysis and
construction process that uses to achieve much larger energy savings than
conventional energy retrofits. Deep energy retrofits can be applied to both
residential and non-residential (“commercial”) buildings. A deep energy
retrofit typically results in energy savings of 30 percent or more, perhaps
spread over several years, and may significantly improve the building
value.[26] The Empire State Building has undergone a deep energy retrofit
process that was completed in 2013. The project team, consisting of
representatives from Johnson Controls, Rocky Mountain Institute, Clinton
Climate Initiative, and Jones Lang LaSalle will have achieved an annual energy
use reduction of 38% and $4.4 million.For example, the 6,500 windows were
remanufactured onsite into superwindows which block heat but pass light. Air
conditioning operating costs on hot days were reduced and this saved $17
million of the project's capital cost immediately, partly funding other retrofitting.
Receiving a gold Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) rating in
September 2011, the Empire State Building is the tallest LEED certified building
in the United States. The Indianapolis City-County Building recently underwent
a deep energy retrofit process, which has achieved an annual energy reduction
of 46% and $750,000 annual energy saving.
Energy retrofits, including deep, and other types undertaken
in residential, commercial or industrial locations are generally supported
through various forms of financing or incentives. Incentives include
pre-packaged rebates where the buyer/user may not even be aware that the item
being used has been rebated or "bought down". "Upstream" or
"Midstream" buy downs are common for efficient lighting products.
Other rebates are more explicit and transparent to the end user through the use
of formal applications. In addition to rebates, which may be offered through
government or utility programs, governments sometimes offer tax incentives for
energy efficiency projects. Some entities offer rebate and payment guidance and
facilitation services that enable energy end use customers tap into rebate and
incentive programs.
To evaluate the economic soundness of energy efficiency
investments in buildings, cost-effectiveness analysis or CEA can be used. A CEA
calculation will produce the value of energy saved, sometimes called negawatts,
in $/kWh. The energy in such a calculation is virtual in the sense that it was
never consumed but rather saved due to some energy efficiency investment being
made. Thus CEA allows comparing the price of negawatts with price of energy
such as electricity from the grid or the cheapest renewable alternative. The
benefit of the CEA approach in energy systems is that it avoids the need to
guess future energy prices for the purposes of the calculation, thus removing
the major source of uncertainty in the appraisal of energy efficiency
investments.
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