Abstract

The EU building stock is 97% not energy efficient and the promotion of energy retrofitting strategies is a key way of reducing energy consumptions and greenhouse gas emission. In order to improve the energy performance of buildings, the European Union released the Energy Performance of Buildings and the Energy Efficiency Directives. The certification of the energy performance of a building is a central element of these Directives to monitor and promote energy performance improvements in buildings, with the aim of increasing their energy efficiency level, thereby reducing greenhouse gas emissions. This work evaluates the energy performance of existing residential buildings using the energy performance certificate database and identifies the more effective retrofitting interventions by applying an urban-scale energy model. The novelty of this study is that a new retrofitting database is created to improve the results of a building energy model at urban scale taking into account the real characteristics of the built environment. The here presented GIS-based monthly engineering model is flexible and easily applicable to different contexts, and was used to investigate energy efficiency scenarios by evaluating their effects of city scale. An urban energy atlas was designed for an Italian city, Turin, as a decision-making platform for policy makers and citizens. This energy platform can give information on energy consumption, production and productivity potential, but also on energy retrofitting scenarios. The results of this work show that it is possible to obtain energy savings for space heating of 79,064 MWh/year for the residential buildings connected to the district heating network in the city of Turin; these interventions refer mainly to thermal insulation of buildings envelope with windows replacement and allow a reduction in greenhouse gas emissions of 12,097 tonCO2eq/year.

Highlights

  • The reduction of energy consumption in buildings is a fundamental point in the European Union policies aimed at achieving energy and climate targets,1 3 Vol.:(0123456789)47 Page 2 of 28 and the promotion of energy efficiency (EE) is one of the main priorities of the Energy Union

  • This study proposes an improvement in the input data of an engineering model at an urban scale, and investigates EE scenarios as taken from an energy performance certificate (EPC) database

  • The EPCs have been elaborated through the use of a Geographic Information System (GIS) tool to assess the distribution of building characteristics and EE measures in the city of Turin

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Summary

Introduction

The reduction of energy consumption in buildings is a fundamental point in the European Union policies aimed at achieving energy and climate targets,1 3 Vol.:(0123456789)47 Page 2 of 28 and the promotion of energy efficiency (EE) is one of the main priorities of the Energy Union. The reduction of energy consumption in buildings is a fundamental point in the European Union policies aimed at achieving energy and climate targets,. In 2014, the European Council adopted new targets for 2030 in which they promoting renewable energy sources (RESs) and EE: reduced greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by at least 40%, increased use of RES by at least 32% and improved EE by at least 32.5%. According to an IRENA report (International Renewable Energy Agency—IRENA, 2019), energy-related GHG emission reductions would have to decline by as much as 70% by 2050, compared to the current levels, in order to reach the climate targets. An EPC scheme has the aim of monitoring and promoting energy performance (EP) improvements in buildings, by increasing the EE and reducing the GHG emissions of such buildings (Bio Intelligence Service et al, 2013; Bull et al, 2012)

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