Abstract

Energy audits are a time-consuming and expensive initial step in the building retrofit process. Virtual energy audits purport to be an alternative that remotely identifies energy efficiency measures (EEMs) that may reduce electricity consumption and offset operational costs to businesses operating during and after the COVID-19 pandemic. This case study reviews virtual energy audits as a means to benchmark energy use and estimate cost savings from future EEMs. A novel feature was the estimation of energy costs associated with increasing ventilation to improve indoor air quality. The authors analyzed ten virtual energy audits performed in Honolulu, Hawai’i, over a two-week period that used existing building information and electricity use data to estimate a potential 9% to 41% annual electricity use reduction per building and a 24 MWh to 1195 MWh reduction, respectively. This paper makes a significant contribution through its assessment of virtual energy audits as a step beyond benchmarking, which has merit as an educational tool to motivate business owners to reduce energy use and improve indoor air quality. Further evaluation and improvements are suggested to study how often the virtual energy audits instigate action, how they compare with in-person audits, and their potential for use at a large scale.

Highlights

  • The Healthy and Resilient Buildings Initiative, “Initiative”, was introduced by the City and County of Honolulu, Hawai’i, USA (Honolulu) in December of 2020 to offer free energy assessments vis-à-vis virtual energy audits to commercial building owners with revenue-grade smart meters [1]

  • The outcomes of each virtual energy audit were summarized in a report to participating building owners and outlined potential energy efficiency and resiliency measures to be further investigated for deployment

  • The objective of this paper is to demonstrate the large-scale potential to conduct virtual energy audits and inform businesses of potential energy cost savings and costs of increased ventilation rates when considering economic, operational, and air ventilation factors

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Summary

Introduction

The Healthy and Resilient Buildings Initiative, “Initiative”, was introduced by the City and County of Honolulu, Hawai’i, USA (Honolulu) in December of 2020 to offer free energy assessments vis-à-vis virtual energy audits to commercial building owners with revenue-grade smart meters [1]. The objective was to provide an immediate pathway for relief to businesses from the COVID-19 pandemic by using virtual energy audits to quickly identify operational energy savings from potential energy efficiency measures (EEMs) and indoor air quality improvements through potential increased air flow. The objective of this paper is to demonstrate the large-scale potential to conduct virtual energy audits and inform businesses of potential energy cost savings and costs of increased ventilation rates when considering economic, operational, and air ventilation factors. In Honolulu, the Office of Climate Change, Sustainability and Resiliency determined that the adverse impact of the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus-2 (SARSCoV-2) (referred as COVID-19) pandemic, had created an urgent need to reduce operating costs to businesses through changes to the built environment while addressing modifications to achieve healthy and safe operations.

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