Abstract

Buildings are responsible for 40% of global energy use and contribute towards 30% of the total CO2 emissions. The drive to reduce energy consumption and associated greenhouse gas emissions from buildings has acted as a catalyst in the increasing installation of meters and sensors for monitoring energy use and indoor environmental conditions in buildings. This paper reviews the state-of-the-art in building energy metering and environmental monitoring, including their social, economic, environmental and legislative drivers. The integration of meters and sensors with existing building energy management systems (BEMS) is critically appraised, especially with regard to communication technologies and protocols such as ModBus, M-Bus, Ethernet, Cellular, ZigBee, WiFi and BACnet. Findings suggest that energy metering is covered in existing policies and regulations in only a handful of countries. Most of the legislations and policies on energy metering in Europe are in response to the Energy Performance of Buildings Directive (EPBD), 2002/91/EC. However, recent developments in policy are pointing towards more stringent metering requirements in future, moving away from voluntary to mandatory compliance. With regards to metering equipment, significant developments have been made in the recent past on miniaturisation, accuracy, robustness, data storage, ability to connect using multiple communication protocols, and the integration with BEMS and the Cloud – resulting in a range of available solutions, selection of which can be challenging. Developments in communication technologies, in particular in low-power wireless such as ZigBee and Bluetooth LE (BLE), are enabling cost-effective machine to machine (M2M) and internet of things (IoT) implementation of sensor networks. Privacy and data protection, however, remain a concern for data aggregators and end-users. The standardization of network protocols and device functionalities remains an active area of research and development, especially due to the prevalence of many protocols in the BEMS industry. Available solutions often lack interoperability between hardware and software systems, resulting in vendor lock-in. The paper provides a comprehensive understanding of available technologies for energy metering and environmental monitoring; their drivers, advantages and limitations; factors affecting their selection and future directions of research and development – for use a reference, as well as for generating further interest in this expanding research area.

Highlights

  • Buildings are responsible for 40% of global energy use and contribute towards 30% of the total CO2 emissions

  • In order to limit the projected global temperature rise to 2 ◦C, the International Energy Agency (IEA) has proposed four emissions reduction policy solutions, of which the policies related to specific energy efficiency measures have been found to yield in greater savings – about 49% of the total emissions savings identified in the World Energy Outlook 2013 report [7]

  • We presented a comprehensive review discussing metering and sensing technologies for buildings

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Summary

Drivers for energy metering and environmental monitoring

There are many existing drivers for the installation of meters and sensors in buildings, but the overriding driver is usually to enable better management of energy within the building and identifying and achieving potential energy and cost savings and to verify savings that have been achieved [15]. There is a considerable overlap between these drivers and often it is difficult to assess which driver takes precedence over others

Mitigating climate change and enhancing energy efficiency
Compliance with regulations and legislations
Feedback on energy consumption and cost reduction
Corporate social responsibility
Classification of metering and monitoring devices
Electricity metering
Gas metering
Air temperature
Mean radiant temperature
Indoor air velocity
Relative humidity
Occupancy and daylight sensors
Accuracy
Ease of deployment
Communication protocol
Granularity
Availability
Communication and network technologies
ZigBee
Power line carriers
ModBus
GPRS and GSM
Ethernet
BACnet
Interoperability
Security
MEMS sensor technologies
Lack of ICT infrastructure
Findings
Conclusions
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