EPBD&revision8 policy&background:& - European...
Transcript of EPBD&revision8 policy&background:& - European...
CLEAN ENERGY FOR ALL EUROPEANS
EPBD revision-policy background: Upgrading buildings energy performance and smartness
Paula Rey GarciaTeam leader Buildings & FinanceEuropean Commission- DG ENERGY, Energy Efficiency unit
CLEAN ENERGY FOR ALL EUROPEANS
75% of the housing stock is energy inefficient, missing the benefits of increased renovation.
Renovation rates are too low and renovation depth is too shallow.
Need to accelerate and finance building renovation investments.
Tapping the potential of smart building technologies
FACTS
EPBD review: focus on buildings – for good reasons
.
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• Smart- supporting ICT, smart building technologies and infrastructure for e-mobility
• Simpler
• Supportive of building renovation
THE PROPOSAL TO REVISE THE EPBD
BETTER BUILDINGS, FASTER
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Long term building renovation strategies (Article 2a)
Provisions on long-term strategies in Article 4 of Directive2012/27/EU (EED) in the EPBD moved in a new article 2a.
Completed by 2 new paragraphs:• Vision of a decarbonised building stock by 2050;;• Smart Finance for Smart Buildings approach to mobilisation ofinvestment.
Working in synergy with Article 7 of the EED
More impactful provisions – Renovation strategies, With a long term vision and financing provisions
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provide a stronger link between financial measures in the MemberStates and energy efficiency improvements in the renovation ofbuildings (Article 10)
In addition to energy performance, allow for tracking of actual energyconsumption of all types of buildings in existing databases.
For buildings frequently visited by the public (over 250 m2) thedatabases are required to contain this information and be regularlyupdated.
For statistical and research purposes, aggregated and anonymiseddata shall be made available at least for public authorities.
Clarification of the framework for the calculation of energy performanceof buildings (Annex I)• Including stronger links with CEN standards.
More supportive provisions building on Energy Performance Certificates –Financial incentives, transparency in energy performance calculation
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Inspections on heating & air-conditioning systems areupdated (Articles 14 and 15)• Reduced administrative burden,• Focus on medium to large buildings,• Leveraging the effectiveness of electronic monitoring.
New thresholds introduced:• Apartment block with central systems: 100 kW• Non-residential buildings: 250 MWh/year primary energy
Electronic monitoring - alternative to inspectionsDeletion of (existing) alternative measures based on advice
Simpler and more impactful provisions – Inspections
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An updated definition of Technical Building Systems (TBS)and additional provisions to better documenting the initialperformance of technical building systems and maintain theiroperational performance over time
Extending the scope of TBS to building automation and control,on-site electricity generation, on-site infrastructure for electro-mobility (Article 2(3))
System requirements for new, replaced and upgraded TBS (article8(1)) and tracing, documenting and passing on to the buildingowner the energy performance of technical building systemsfollowing installation, replacement or upgrade (+ inclusion in thenational energy certificate database) (Article 8(5)).
Smarter provisions – Technical Building Systems
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Additional provisions to support the deployment of the EUinfrastructure for electro-mobility
Installation of recharging points (at least 1 every 10 parkingspaces) in non-residential buildings with more than 10 parkingspaces. The provision applies to new buildings and buildingsundergoing major renovation, and, from 2025, to all non-residential buildings (Article 8(2))
Pre-cabling of every parking space in new or major renovation ofresidential buildings with more than 10 parking spaces (Article8(3))
Some exemptions for buildings already covered by the currentlegislation and of buildings owned and used by SMEs (article 8(4))
Smarter provisions – Electro-mobility
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New article 8(6) proposes introducing a Smart ReadinessIndicator for buildings.• Will characterize the ability of a building to manage itself,• To interact with its occupants,• And to take part in demand response and contribute to smooth, safeand optimal operation of connected energy assets.
Progress towards ‘smarter’ building systems can support a moreefficient implementation of the EPBD and result in additionalbenefits for building users, energy consumers and future grids.
The Smart Readiness Indicator will support the uptake oftechnical innovation in the building sector, where there is a lack ofinvestment despite short payback periods.
Smarter provisions – Smart readiness indicator
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• Supporting the project pipeline at EU and local level
• Project Development Assistance facilities
• "One-stop-shops"
Assistance and aggregation De-risking
• Deploying Financial Instruments and flexible energy efficiency and renewable financing platforms
• Building on EFSI II blending with ESIF funds
• Understanding the risks and benefits for financiers and investors
• The De-risking Energy Efficiency Platform
• Commonly accepted underwriting framework
MAJOR GOAL - improve investment climate for energy efficiency
More effective use of public funds
THE "SMART FINANCE FOR SMART BUILDINGS" INITIATIVE
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11 #EnergyUnion
Thank you!Paula Rey Garcia
Team leader Buildings & FinanceEnergy Efficiency Unit
DG ENER, European Commission
https://ec.europa.eu/energy/en/news/commission-proposes-new-rules-consumer-centred-clean-energy-transition
A joint presentation by Project Advisers of the EASMEENERGY Unitchaired by Agata KotkowskaHead of Buildings, Heating and Cooling Sector
Energy efficiency Buildings Calls 2018/2019
A joint presentation by Project Advisers of the EASMEENERGY Unitchaired by Agata KotkowskaHead of Buildings, Heating and Cooling Sector
Energy efficiency Buildings Calls 2018/2019
11:00 – 11:05 Welcome and introductionAgata Kotkowska, Head of Buildings, Heating and Cooling Sector, EASME
11.05 -11.20: Enhancing buildings' energy performance and smartnessPaula Rey Garcia, Directorate –General for ENER, Energy Efficiency UnitTeam Leader of Buildings and Finance Team
11.20 – 11:25 EE-1: Decarbonisation of the EU building stock: innovative approaches and affordable solutions changing the market for buildings renovationJanna Schönfeld, Project Advisor
11:25 – 11:30 EE-2: Integrated home renovation servicesChristophe Milin, Project Advisor
11:30 – 11:35 EE-3: Stimulating demand for sustainable energy skills in the construction sector Gordon Sutherland, Senior Project Advisor
11:35 – 11:40 EE-4: Upgrading smartness of existing buildings through innovations for legacy equipment Pierre Antoine Vernon, Project Advisor
11:40 - 11:50 EE-5: Next-generation of Energy Performance Assessment and CertificationRebecca KanelleaMiguel Angel Romero, Project Advisor
11:50 – 12:15 Questions and Answers session12:15 – 12.30 What makes the project successful – Experience from the current H2020 project
Roberto Lollini, Coordinator of the 4RinEU project12:30 Closing of the session
Agata Kotkowska
Questions
Question & Answer session at the end
• You can raise your hand during that session !
Or –during the presentations- you can also use your mobile phone or computer:
• simply go to https://www.sli.do
• enter #H2020Energy and choose our room - we are in the room Gasperi
• Enter your question in the question box
• We will display questions at the end of the session
Agata KotkowskaHead of Buildings, Heating and Cooling Sector, EASME
Welcome and introduction
EE01 EE02*EE05
EE06EE08EE13EE15
EE09EE10EE11*
EE14EE16EE17**
EC01EC02
EE01EE02EE03EE04EE05
EE06EE08EE13EE15
EE09EE10EE11
EE14EE16
EC01EC02
Energy Efficiency Call 2018
Energy Efficiency Call 2019
* Single beneficiaries eligible
** Single beneficiaries eligible. Deadline: 13 November 2018
Buildings ConsumersIndustry, Products& Services
Finance for Sustainable
Energy
Public authorities
Topic Budget 2018
Budget 2019
Deadlines
LC-SC3-EE-1 9,0 12,0 25 Jan.18 - 4 Sept.1824 Jan.19 - 3 Sept.19
LC-SC3-EE-2 7,0 10,0 4 Sept. 18 - 3 Sept. 19
LC-SC3-EE-3 6,0 24 Jan.19 - 3 Sept.19LC-SC3-EE-4 10,0 24 Jan.19 – 3 Sept.19LC-SC3-EE-5 5,0 (CSA) 10,0 (IA) 25 Jan.18 - 4 Sept.18
24 Jan.19 - 3 Sept.19
Deadlines 2018– 2019 / Indicative Budget
§ LC-EEB-01-2019: Integration of energy smart materials in non-residential buildings (IA)
§ LC-EEB-02-2018: Building information modelling adapted to efficient renovation (RIA)
§ LC-EEB-03-2019: New developments in plus energy houses (IA)
§ LC-EEB-04-2020: Industrialisation of building envelope for the renovation market (IA)
§ LC-EEB-05-2019-20: Integrated storage systems for residential buildings (IA)
§ LC-EEB-06-2018-20: ICT enabled, sustainable and affordable residential building construction, design to end of life (IA)
EeB/EE PPP in WP 2018-19 for NMBP
Topic Deadlines
LC-EeB 02-2018 31 Oct.17- 22 Feb. 2018LC-EeB 06-2018 31 Oct.17- 22 Feb. 2018LC-EeB 01-2019 16 Oct.18 - 21 Feb. 2019LC-EeB 03-2019 16 Oct.18 - 21 Feb. 2019LC-EeB 05-2019 16 Oct.18 - 21 Feb. 2019
Paula Rey GarciaTeam Leader of Buildings and Finance Team, DG ENER
Enhancing buildings' energy performance and smartness
Janna SchönfeldProject Advisor, Buildings Sector, EASME
LC-SC3-EE 1: Decarbonisation of the EU building stock: innovative approaches and affordable solutions changing the market for buildings renovation
LC-SC3-EE-01-2018-2019: Decarbonisation of the EU building stock
Specific Challenge:
• Action is needed to improve rates of renovation
• New technologies, process and business models
• Deep renovation needs to be more attractive & reliable, less
distruptive & costly, faster, more environmentally friendly
• Proposals should roll out holistic solutions aimed at consumers
EUR 3-‐‑4 millionTRL8-‐‑9
IA70%
LC-SC3-EE-01-2018-2019: Decarbonisation of the EU building stock
Scope:
• Innovations can be right across the value chain, during any stages
of design or construction
• Building fabric, technical systems, links to DHC are all relevant
• Address the drivers to renovate buildings
• Address how consumers & others can use measured data
• Multiple benefits of energy efficiency
LC-SC3-EE-01-2018-2019: Decarbonisation of the EU building stock
Expected Impact:
• Primary energy savings triggered (GWh/year)
• Investments in sustainable energy triggered (million EUR/year)
• "High energy performance" after renovation
• Measurable cost reduction compared with "typical renovation", or
energy performance improvement at similar cost
• Reduce time spent on site by 20%
• Increased rates of renovation
• Reduction of GHG (tCO2-eq/year) and/or air pollutants (kg/year).
Christophe MilinProject Advisor, Finance Sector, EASME
LC-SC3-EE 2: Integrated home renovation services
LC-SC3-EE-2-2018-2019:"Integrated home renovation services"
• Why?- Many project promoters lack the skills and capacity to set up, implement and
finance ambitious sustainable energy projects
- In addition, many lack access to attractive and adequate financing products from the market
• How?- Create (or replicate) "integrated home renovation services", operational by the end
of the action
- Cover the whole "customer journey": from technical and social diagnosis, technical offer, contracting of works, structuring and provision of finance, to the monitoring of works and quality assurance.
- Create more demand for holistic approaches as a result of improved offer by trustful market operators and better awareness from homeowners
CSA100%
LC-SC3-EE-2-2018-2019:"Integrated home renovation services"
• What?- Optimise the services required along the renovation process
(based on a thorough analysis of the local needs and actors in place),
- Reduce renovation costs and time on-site through standardised approaches (e.g. optimized business processes, standardised contractual arrangements, branding of the proposed services, …),
- Mainstream innovative technical solutions adapted to the local context,
- Improve trust and awareness of homeowners towards such services,
- Help improve the legal and regulatory environments and
- Overall improve financing conditions for energy renovation.
• More information- Webinar on "Home Renovation": 21 November 2017 (11:00 – 12:30)
- see https://ec.europa.eu/energy/en/financing-energy-efficiency/sustainable-energy-investment-forums
Gordon SutherlandSenior Project Advisor, Buildings Sector, EASME
LC-SC3-EE 3: Stimulating demand for sustainable energy skills in the construction sector
LC-SC3-EE-03-2019-2020: Stimulating demand for sustainable energy skills in
the construction sectorSpecific Challenge:
• Based on results of BUILD UP Skills, act at market level and support legislative changes to stimulate the demand for energy skills
Scope:
• Tools facilitating the mutual recognition of energy skills and qualifications (e.g. skills registers/passports, mobile apps…)• Initiatives raising awareness of home and building owners/tenants• Support to public authorities for the development of new legislative
frameworks (e.g public procurement)• Partnerships with producers and retailers• Initiatives reinforcing the link between skills/education and energy
performance/quality of construction
EUR 0,5-‐‑1 millionCSA100%
Pierre Antoine VernonProject Advisor, Buildings Sector, EASME
LC-SC3-EE 4: Upgrading smartness of existing buildings through innovations for legacy equipment
EE-04-2019Upgrading smartness of existing buildings through innovations for legacy equipment (IA)
Specific challenge :• Buildings: transition from energy consumers to active contributors to the
energy system • Smart buildings : managing themselves, interacting with their occupants
and with the grid• Improving efficiency of existing building stock as main challenge• Focus on legacy equipment : longer lifecycle, higher costs of replacement,
or difficult to integrate in buildings
EE-04-2019Upgrading smartness of existing buildings through innovations for legacy equipment (IA)
Scope :• Demonstrate technological solutions to manage building energy and interact with the grid based on user preferences-‐ using IT to make existing buildings smarter-‐ connecting both short and long lifecycle equipment• Plan broad market uptake and integration into specific building typologies• Maximise consumer comfort : cost-‐effective, user-‐friendly, easy to install, saving energy and money
EE-04-2019Upgrading smartness of existing buildings through innovations for legacy equipment (IA)
Impact :
• Primary Energy savings (in GWh/year)
• Investments in sustainable energy (in million Euro)
• Upgrade of a significant number of existing buildings
• Energy and costs savings > energy consumption from IT and cost of the upgrade
• Reduction of GHG (tCO2-‐eq/year) and/or air pollutants (kg/year).
Rebecca Kanellea, Miguel Angel RomeroProject Advisors, Buildings Sector, EASME
LC-SC3-EE 5: Next-generation of Energy Performance Assessment and certification
EE-05-2018-2019: Next-generation of Energy Performance Assessment and Certification
Specific Challenge:
• Assessment processes and certificates need to become more reliable, user-friendly, cost-effective and compliant with EU legislation
• Holistic assessment of buildings: envelope and system performances, smart readiness, RES, final energy use, comfort levels
• Use of International and EU standards, particularly ISO/CEN
• Assessments take into account actual measured data from sensors
• Demonstrate how schemes could be strengthened, modernised and best linked to national certification schemes, enhancing compliance checking and effectiveness of financial support
EE-05-2018: Next-generation of Energy Performance Assessment and Certification
Scope:
• Involve stakeholders including certification bodies, in stimulating roll-out of next-generation schemes
• Develop strategies to help converge EPC practices across EU
• Assess applicability of schemes through case studies
• Demonstrate potential of EU-wide uptake of the schemes
• Embed EPCs in energy audits, databases, one-stop-shops
• Link EPCs to buildings renovation passports, individual buildings renovation roadmaps or building logbooks
CSA100%
EE-05-2018: Next-generation of Energy Performance Assessment and Certification
Expected Impact:
• Primary energy savings triggered (GWh/year)
• Investments in sustainable energy triggered (million EUR)
• Increased convergence of good quality and reliable energy performance assessment and certification, uptake and compliance with EU Directives and related standards
• Increased rate of application and compliance of EPCs and independent control systems with the provisions of EU and national legislation, in a defined region
• Increase of EPCs databases for compliance checking and verification, linking with financing schemes and building stock characteristics research etc
EUR 1-‐‑2 million
EE-05-2019: Next-generation of Energy Performance Assessment and Certification
Scope:
• Innovative approaches for assessing building energy performance
• Reliable assessment of building intrinsic performances
• Work towards output-based assessments using available building energy related data
• Improve reliability, cost-effectiveness and compliance with EU-standards, to allow for EU-wide deployment
• Involve relevant stakeholders, including certification bodies
• Consider using EPCs in building passports and renovation roadmaps
TRL6-‐‑7
IA70%
EE-05-2019: Next-generation of Energy Performance Assessment and Certification
Expected Impact:
• Improved user-friendliness of EPCs in terms of clarity and accuracy of the information provided
• Enhanced user awareness of building energy efficiency
• Primary energy savings triggered (GWh/year)
• Investments in sustainable energy triggered (million EUR)
• Reduction of GHG (tCO2-eq/year) and/or air pollutants (kg/year).
EUR 2-‐‑2.5 million
Time for your questions!
Roberto LolliniCoordinator of the 4RinEU project
What makes the project successful –Experience from the current H2020 project
Agata KotkowskaHead of Buildings, Heating and Cooling Sector, EASME
Closing of the session
Information sources
• Horizon 2020 Participant Portalec.europa.eu/research/participants
• National Contact Points
• CORDIS databasecordis.europa.eu
• EASME websiteec.europa.eu/easme
• Queries via email: EASME-‐[email protected]
https://energy.easme-‐web.eu/
The European portal for energy efficiency buildings
• Upload and collaborate• Exchange best practice• Latest news, research• Find data tools, financing
schemes, project case studies
www.buildup.eu
Thank you! #H2020Energy
www.ec.europa.eu/research
25th October 2017Lunch break12:30 – 14:00
Experience from a current H2020 project
BRUXELLES 25/10/2017
EE10-2016: Supporting accelerated and cost-effective deep renovation of buildings
Needs:• Comprehensive deep
renovation packages• Reduction of time and cost of
renovation• Viable business approach
Specific challenges:• Inefficiency of the EU building
stock• Few amount of buildings under
deep renovation
Expected impacts:• 60% Net primary energy saving
• 15% Cost reduction (compared with a typical renovation)
• -50% time for deep renovation
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Steps to prepare 4RinEU proposal
Preparatory activities
• Call scope and expected results à focus on energy, time, costs
• Background from past research works to find à key technologies, and supporttools for developing a robust&reliable deep renovation approach
• Outlines drafting à main ideas, possible impacts, exploitable results, neededskills and expertise (prepared by the coordinators)
Consortium
• Contacts and interactions to shape the best possible partnerships: to performresearch, to develop technologies/tools, to demonstrate results
• Definition of roles and responsibilities
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Steps to prepare 4RinEU proposal
Proposal• Detailing excellence section: key points to actually trigger building deep
renovation market (simulation, industrialization, structured approach)
• Quantitative analysis to define potential impacts on EU building stock, whiledrafting exploitation plan for project results
• Overall approach and methodology for (1) RTD (2) demonstrationestablishing local demo-cases working groups (issues: timing synchronization,procurement procedures, local technology providers, early adopters to testreplication potential), (3) exploitation and (4) dissemination
• Project&risks management (issue: size of consortium and different workingapproaches)
• Budget finalization (issue: size of demonstration actions)
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The project 4RinEU (Oct 2016 – Sep 2020)
Technical Credibility FinancialSocial
NEEDS
ANSWERS
to increase efficiency of whole deep renovation process
do not allow the targeted 3% renovation rate
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Cost-optimal energy audit
Collaborative design platform
Deep renovation implementation
management
Cost-Effective Rating System
PMFPPEH
Sensible Data Handler
Early Reno Strategies for End of Life
Comfort Ceiling Fan operation
The project 4RinEUWe are trying to cover all the phases of a deep renovation process:
4RinEU enables to manage complexity improving the key elements of deep renovationprocess, by transforming data in effective information for different players, and rating thepossible alternatives in terms of: energy, comfort, renovation time and costs, environmentalimpact.
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Audit
Design
Implementation
Commissioning
Managing
Maintenance
Dismantling
DATA/1 FROM EXISTING BUILDING
INFO/0: drivers to deep
renovation
INFO/1: deep renovation technology concept
INFO/2: deep renovation drawings
DATA/2 FROM RENOVATED BUILDING
INFO/3: Data from sensible building data
handler
R7.Energy audit(ADERMA)
deep renovation concept R10.Cost-‐effectiveness
rating system(4RinEU team)
deep renovation projectR1toR6 + R8.
Ren. pack. + Design platform(LDWG)
tech/non-‐tech context constrains
implementationR9.Lean manag.
(LDWG)
R5.Sensible buildingdata handler
(IES)
facility management(bld manager)
maint.deep ren.
functioning
issue
• Auditing
• Design
• Implementation
• Commissioning
• Managing
• Maintenance
• Dismantling
Sources: Thermics, eurac research
The project 4RinEUTechnical
TO REDUCE ENERGY DEMAND
TO IMPROVE ENERGY EFFICIENCY
Prefabricated Multifunctional Facade
Plug and Play Energy Hub
From a prototype…
…through industrialisation…
…to a product!
From a concept…
to technical details and specifications (bill of materials)
Sources: Gumpp&maier, eurac research7
The project 4RinEUFinancial
Fed with the Technologies and the methodologies.The 4RinEU Rating System:• drives the investors in deep renovation• identifies the level of risk of renovation process
(by analysing potential failures)• enables conscious investments ranking possible
deep renovation packages depending oninvestors priorities and available financialsupport schemes
Cost-Effective Rating System
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Demo cases and early adopters
3 Demo cases:
HAUGERUDSENTERETOslo - Norway
MARIËNBURG Soest – The Netherlands
ALSAMORA 6Lleida - Spain
Specific target: residential social housingIdentified with the partners the main renovation drivers à demo cases rapresentative ofthe renovation needs
Source: eurac research
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Demonstration of the impact
Life Cycle cost reduction >15% due to:
Renovation package Demo case 3:
PFM + integration of ventilation
New heating system + PPEH
Optimisation of RES with Early Reno
Installation of ceiling fans
Expected energy savings >70%Source: eurac research
Reliable savings estimated by 4RinEU audit
Higher durability and reduced maintenance of 4RinEU technologies
Failures reduction during the construction10
Demonstration of the impact
• Action shifted during the industrial process
• Actions on the building site non necessary for 4RinEU deep renovation packages
Renovation time on the building site reduced up to 50% thanks to:
TRADITIONAL RENOVATION VS 4RinEU RENOVATION
Prefabricated envelope Plug&play HVAC management system
Deep renovation implementation management
• Actions improved through Lean management of the building site
• Reduction of the failures
- 32%
- 16%
- 5%
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The project consortium
Applied Research Centres
R&D
Technology partnersManufacturer of prefabricated timber construction elementsManufacturer of H&C systems integrating RES
Public institutions
Social housing agency
Manufacturer of H&C systems integrating RES
Consultancy
Construction company
Research to market
Engineering companiesSoftware developers (support to the design&assessment)
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The project consortium
Project coordinator
- Envelope- HVAC- RES
- Comfort- Data into information- End-of-life
Support to develop strategies and implement specific plan for the market penetrationCompanies dealing with technology development:
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The project consortium
Auditing methodology
Construction sitemanagement
Participative design,cost-effective ratingsystem
Collaborative designplatform
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Cost-Effective Rating system based on:1. Energy2. Environmental impact3. Comfort4. Time5. LC Costs
The project consortium
Demo case owners Local demo advisor
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EE1 2018/20192020 Decarbonisation of the EU building stock
• Rates of renovation à too low • Renovation projects à more reliable, and
more cost-effective
• Renovation implementation à less time-consuming, and less cumbersome for the occupants
Natural follow up for 4RinEU à user needs driven approach, optimizing process, technologies and RES exploitation
Rationale (why?):
Key issues (how?):
Expected impact:
• Faster & cheaper renovation• high energy performance standards • less disruption with holistic solutions
• high levels of occupant comfort. • Decisions to renovate may sometimes
coincide with structural repairs.
-‐ 15% cost reduction compared with typical renovation-‐ Demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed solutions-‐ Reduce time needed for renovation by half compared with typical renovation
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The project 4RinEUTO IMPROVE BUILDING OPERATION
Sensible Data HandlerEarly Reno
Strategies for component End of Life
light
heat
RES
ventilation
Source: eurac research
Existing separate modules
Integrated optimisation tool
Technical
Comfort Ceiling Fan operation
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TO REDUCE CONSTRUCTION WASTE
Source: IES
From a user need
Towards a usable App
The project 4RinEUTo support the stakeholders along the wholerenovation process:• Help to understand renovation issues and
associated potentials,• Ensure an effective and participated design,• Manage the construction site and reduce the
working time and the associated failures.
Credibility Social
Cost-optimal energy audit Collaborative design platform
Deep renovation implementation
management
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