1 / 12

Energy Efficiency in Housing and Small Buildings Cost & Benefit Analysis

Energy Efficiency in Housing and Small Buildings Cost & Benefit Analysis. November 2011. CCBFC Policy Advice. Cost implications for proposed changes incremental capital cost of construction ($) and incremental annual energy savings ($/year or kWh/year)

kaiyo
Télécharger la présentation

Energy Efficiency in Housing and Small Buildings Cost & Benefit Analysis

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Energy Efficiency in Housing and Small BuildingsCost & Benefit Analysis November 2011

  2. CCBFC Policy Advice • Cost implications for proposed changes • incremental capital cost of construction ($) and • incremental annual energy savings ($/year or kWh/year) • The focus and rationale for the development of changes should be the energy target rather than costing data. • CCBFC Policy Advice • Use Current Construction Practice as Baseline • Not the 1997 MNECH

  3. Baseline – Survey • Development of Current Construction Baseline • Builder Survey Study by Marshall Leslie • Also considered other sources • CHBA Pulse Survey • HVAC Industry Sales figures • Results from Survey • 253 builders responded • representing over 5600 houses built in 2009 • 75 questions

  4. Baseline – Data Analysis • CCC Analysis of Survey Data • organized by climate zones • weighted for population and housing starts • normalized for more realistic split of EE program builders • Single baseline across Canada • choose average (mode) or existing code requirement or realistic value (sales figures) • unless special situation requires multiple baselines

  5. Baseline – Specifications • Exterior Wall Insulation R20 Nominal • Wall framing (CHBA) 2x6 framing, 16” on center • Attic Insulation R40 Nominal • Airtightness (NRCan) 3.18 ac/h (average, nationally weighted) • Basement Walls Inside at full height with R12 • Floor Slabs Not insulated • Window glazing option Double glazed, low-e argon • Window Frame Vinyl • FDWR (CHBA/CMHI) 17- 18% • Gas furnace efficiency 90% efficiency furnaces • HRVs no HRV, no A/C, no heat pump • Thermostats programmable

  6. Cost Studies • Assumptions in establishing the cost • Based on 2011, no taxes. no escalation, no shipping • No builder markup or warehouse discount (= retail cost) • Specific Items for costing studies • are established through proposed changes • not all line items apply in each climate zone • 8 locations in Canada • Ottawa – Toronto – Halifax – Montreal – Winnipeg – Edmonton – Yellowknife – Vancouver • Ottawa base price x Factor for each location • Locations are not the same as climate zone representatives • 2 reports (BE & HVAC)

  7. Cost Studies Location Factor Baseline Cost Line-by-line items Incremental Cost

  8. Energy Savings Studies • Method of establishing savings • HOT2000 runs of House #4 (of 11 Archetypes) • For each of the 80 line items (BE & HVAC), model: • the base case and upgrade case (x2) • in each climate zone (x6) • with HRV and without HRV (x2) • blended energy rate of 6¢ per kWh or 1.6¢ per MJ • Same Items as costing studies • 18 reports (6 BE/HRV, 6 BE/noHRV, 6 HVAC) • Climate zones are represented by • Vancouver – Toronto – Montreal – Winnipeg – Fort McMurray – Yellowknife

  9. Energy Savings Studies Baseline Energy Consumption of House 4 Energy Savings in MJ per year Energy Savings in $ per year @ 1.6¢ per MJ Line-by-line items Energy Consumption of House 4 - After change

  10. Overall Cost-Benefit • Whole House Method • House #4 (of 11 Archetypes) • Combine incremental cost ($) and energy savings (kWhe and $) • for each line item – where required in that climate zone • for House 4: actual area / number – as present • base case vs proposed change (x2) • in each climate zone (x6) • with HRV and without HRV (x2) • Describeimplications • Cost of all req’d measures • Energy reduction of all req’d measures • Value Index ($/kWhe) • Overall reduction in energy (%)

  11. Cost – Benefit – Summary

  12. Cost – Benefit – Summary

More Related