Abstract

The International Standards ISO 50001 and ISO 50006 can be easily transferred to organizations, which outputs consist of tangible products. However, it is equally important to build an energy management system tailored to public organizations, whose outputs are often immaterial goods and in which buildings highly affect the overall energy performances. Commonly, energy performances of buildings are assessed by comparison with sector-based benchmarks, whilst monitoring and control practises are often overlooked. Under these premises, this paper aims at proposing a common framework for an energy management system tailored to public organizations in which buildings play a pivotal role in targeting energy performance improvement. The proposed energy management system also relies on the effective exploitation of monitoring and control tools to promptly identify deviations from the expected energy performance values and to evaluate improvements over time.

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