Optimization and decision making for building energy efficiency strategies

Energy and behavioral impacts of integrative retrofits for residential buildings: What is at stake for building energy policy reforms in northern China?

Peng Xu, Tengfang Xu, Pengyuan Shen

2013

Energy Policy

Energy and behavioral impacts of integrative retrofits for residential buildings: What is at stake for building energy policy reforms in northern China?

Model calibration of daily heating energy use (top-floor unit, #902).

Summary

This study assessed northern China apartment retrofits via building monitoring, occupant surveys, and energy simulations, revealing 53–66% heating-energy savings through standards-aligned upgrades and district heating. Despite minimal behavioral shifts from incentives/metering, potential exists; future policies should integrate technology, education, and enhanced thermal integrity (e.g., roof/balcony insulation) for deeper energy efficiency.

Abstract

Based upon the results from extensive building monitoring and surveys on occupants behaviors in a representative nine-story apartment building in northern China, building energy simulations were performed to evaluate the impacts of integrative retrofits implemented. Integrative retrofits required by the newer building energy standard produced significant heating-energy savings (i.e., 53%) when compared with baseline buildings commonly built in early 1980s. Taking into account district-heating-system upgrades as part of integrative retrofit measures, a representative apartment building was 66% more efficient than the baseline building. Contrary to expectation, little behavioral change was found in response to the provisions of monetary incentive, billing-method reform, or metering of heating energy use in individual apartment units. Yet this paper identified sizable energy savings potential if occupants behavioral changes were to actually happen. This indicates that provisions of financial invidual metering were insufficient for triggering substantial behavioral changes leading toward more energy savings in the current buildings. It is recommended that innovative energy policies, technology upgrades, and education would be needed to promote behavioral changes toward additional energy savings. Finally, measures and strategies to further enhance thermal integrity criteria (e.g., insulations of roof and balcony) are recommended in China's future building energy policy

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Publication Details

Journal

Energy Policy

Publication Year

2013

Authors

Peng Xu, Tengfang Xu, Pengyuan Shen

Categories

Optimization and decision making for building energy efficiency strategies