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ABBE Level 3 Diploma in Domestic Green Deal Advice 12. Green Deal Occupancy Assessment

ABBE Level 3 Diploma in Domestic Green Deal Advice 12. Green Deal Occupancy Assessment. Presented by [Name]. Outline of the Green Deal Home Visit and the Occupancy Assessment Occupancy Assessment – Considerations Information Collection for the Occupancy Assessment.

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ABBE Level 3 Diploma in Domestic Green Deal Advice 12. Green Deal Occupancy Assessment

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  1. ABBE Level 3 Diploma in Domestic Green Deal Advice12. Green Deal Occupancy Assessment Presented by [Name] Outline of the Green Deal Home Visit and the Occupancy Assessment Occupancy Assessment – Considerations Information Collection for the Occupancy Assessment

  2. Outline of the Green Deal Home Visit and the Occupancy Assessment

  3. Outline of Visit/Occupancy Assessment 1. Contact the customer in advance of the visit to explain what it entails, and to ask them to have ready any relevant info, such as fuel bills, receipts or guarantees for any work done. Also ask if they already have an EPC (especially if they have recently moved into the home) – if so, and they cannot find it, obtain their permission to look it up on Landmark. 2. Visit at the agreed time and discuss the visit with the customer. Explain all points on your sign off sheet/check sheet, to make sure the customer is fully informed about the process before the assessment begins.

  4. Outline of Visit/Occupancy Assessment 3. Inspect the property and talk to the customer to determine how the occupiers use the home in practice, if possible taking information from their fuel bills, and noting their usage of appliances (e.g. refrigerator and tumble dryer). Do not make assumptions. Ask the question 4. If possible, immediately enter the data gathered into the Green Deal Advisor software and compare the customer's fuel bills with the estimates in the EPC and OA.

  5. Outline of Visit/Occupancy Assessment 5. Talk to the customer about their use of the installed energy-using systems, particularly how they use any controls, to establish if any high energy use is down to the way the customer uses them. 6. Find out whether they fall into any category that may receive funding help from the Energy Company Obligation (ECO). The ECO works alongside the Green Deal finance offer by targeting appropriate measures at those households likely to need additional support – in particular those containing vulnerable people on low incomes and in hard-to-treat housing.

  6. Outline of Visit/Occupancy Assessment 7. Use the outputs from the GDAR to consider what improvement measures and/or behaviour changes would help to reduce the customer's fuel bills. Reviewing the recommendations produced by the GDAR will provide estimates of the savings that can be expected from them and an indication of whether the suggested measures will satisfy the “Golden Rule”. Be aware that some options for improvements will almost certainly be beyond Green Deal funding, but might still be a viable solution if the customer is willing to provide some of their own funding, from savings or via a separate loan.

  7. Outline of Visit/Occupancy Assessment 8. Discuss these options, their relative costs, disadvantages and benefits, with the customer, and agree the types of improvement that the customer wishes to consider. 9. Discuss possible low cost, no cost measures with the customer to improve their energy saving and to begin saving immediately

  8. Outline of Visit/Occupancy Assessment 10. Encourage the customer to adopt a programme of whole house improvement, which is generally more cost effective and less disruptive than making individual improvements one at a time; one large-saving item may also pay fully for additional energy-saving items. For example, for a solid wall home, internal wall insulation may be under consideration; if the customer is considering refitting the kitchen, this would be the ideal time to install wall insulation and also to replace older white goods with the most efficient options. To an extent, this will depend on funding availability and the financial circumstances of the customer, so again this should be handled tactfully. 11. If applicable, discuss possible ECO funding that may be available to offset some of the upfront costs.

  9. Occupancy Assessment – Considerations

  10. Occupancy Short Description: Number of occupants. Long Description: Total number of occupants normally living in the dwelling. Notes: This is just a straight count of the number of people who sleep in this dwelling on at least half of the nights in a year, regardless of their age/size. The answer should be a whole number. Don’t attempt to correct for children (e.g. counting as half). Students living away from home during term time should be excluded from the count.

  11. Showers and Baths Short description: Type of shower and frequency of use of bath and shower Long description: What type of shower is present (if any)? How often is it used? How often is the bath used? Notes: If more than one shower type is present, choose the one that is used most Frequency of use can be asked in terms of uses per day/week/month, or whatever is easiest for the occupant, but record in uses per day (for the household as a whole) for input to the software. Given the personal nature of this question, some occupants may not wish to answer it, in which case default values are used, resulting in a less accurate assessment of hot water use. Choose from the following shower types: • None: No shower is present in this home. • Unknown: Unidentifiable, or occupant doesn’t know and won’t let assessor see it. • Mixer: Shower fed from hot water cylinder (not pumped), or combi boiler. • Electric: Shower with an electric heating element which heats water at the point of use. • Pumped: ‘Power’ shower with an electric pump to increase the flow rate.

  12. Property Details

  13. Heating Systems Define main and secondary heating systems: Which heating system is actually used as the main heating system in this household? Which second main system is actually used in this household? Which secondary system is actually used in this household? This question is about how occupants heat this home in practice in the winter. The choice of systems may therefore be different to what was assumed in the RdSAP assessment. Main, Second Main and Secondary systems can only be replaced with Secondary Heaters.

  14. Heating Systems

  15. Main Heating The main heating system is defined as: • A system which heats the largest proportion of the dwelling. • A system which is not usually based on individual room heaters (although it can be). • A system which usually also provides the water heating. If there is more than one heating system or device in a property, use the following process to decide which is the main heating system: • The main system usually provides both space and water heating and should heat at least 30% of the dwelling. • If no system provides space and water heating then select the system which heats the greatest part of the dwelling. • If there is still doubt then select the system which supplies useful heat to the dwelling at the lowest cost. • If the costs are the same then select the system which heats the living room.

  16. Additional Main System If a dwelling has an additional main system then the proportion of the property heated by each system should be calculated. This should be based on heated floor area to the nearest 10%. • If two systems serve the same heating circuit then assume there is a 50/50 split. • The main system should be the one which heats the living area. Examples where an additional main system can be used: • A large property has two different boilers fitted so the whole property can be heated. One boiler is the main system the other is the additional main system. • A property has a boiler fitted to replace storage heaters, but some functioning storage heaters are left in the property, the boiler is the main system and the storage heaters are the additional system

  17. Secondary Heating Secondary heating must be based on fixed room heaters. • A fixed room heater is an independent heater not on a central system, such as a gas fire or electric panel heater. The heater must be fixed in place, so portable heaters are not included in the assessment. Secondary Heater selection: • Select the type of heater which heats the greatest number of habitable rooms. • If that does not resolve the choice then select the heater which is cheapest to run, based on fuel cost. • If that still does not narrow it down, select the device with the lowest efficiency. • Make use of the Second Main system.

  18. Heating Systems The selection once the heating systems are defined are for Room Heaters only. The selections are: Main Heating – As RdSap Room Heater

  19. Heating Systems Fuel Category: Gas Oil Solid Electric Fuel: this refers to the type of fuel selected e.g. Mains Gas, LPG etc…

  20. Heating Systems Selection for Room Heaters depends on the Fuel they are burning.

  21. Rooms Heated By Each System Short description: Habitable rooms heated by each system. Long description: Identification of which rooms are heated and by which heating system. The living area comprises rooms normally heated to a higher temperature than the rest of the house). Indicate rooms as partially heated if normally kept at a lower temperature (e.g. TRV set 1 or the frost setting because room rarely used). It is possible to have more than one system for a room (commonly the main living room having both central heating and a focal point fire). The following table illustrates.

  22. Rooms Heated By Each System

  23. Living Area Temperature Short Description: The temperature to which the living area is normally heated Long Description: The temperature reached on a normal day in winterin the living room when the heating has been on long enough to reach the occupants’ desired temperature. If the thermostat is in the living room and is used in the normal way (i.e. generally left in one position) record the thermostat set point. If the thermostat is not in the living room, add 3°C to the set-point to estimate the living room temperature. If there is no thermostat, or it is frequently adjusted, a reliable estimate cannot be made, so record ‘unknown’. (Where programmable thermostats are used (with the possibility of having a variable set point) use the highest set point for the most common day type (e.g. even if a higher set-point is used at the weekend, use the weekday maximum).

  24. Heating Patterns The hours of heating on a typical week in winter On a normal day, the hours during which the heating is normally on and on an alternative day, the hours during which the heating is normally on. How many days of the week is the alternative heating pattern used? Only need to provide alternative hours if the heating is used differently on some days of the week (e.g. longer hours at the weekend). Record up to 4 heating periods per normal day and up to 4 per alternative day. More than 4 will be extremely rare, but if necessary combine any remaining hours into the 4th.

  25. Heating Patterns For each period of heating, record the on time and the off time. In cases where a programmer is present, the occupant may know their on and off time to the nearest minute, in which case enter them to this level of accuracy, but in other cases times to the nearest half an hour would be adequate. Total number of hours on is not sufficient, because the hours the heating is off between heating periods is needed to estimate how much the house cools to get the right average internal temperature. The number of days per week the alternative heating pattern is used doesn’t necessarily have to be a whole number.

  26. Heating Patterns Example heating pattern Number of days per week alternative pattern used

  27. Tumble Dryer Short description: Level of use of tumble dryer Long description: During a year, what proportion of clothes drying is done using a tumble dryer? Enter zero if not present. If present, estimate proportion of drying that is done using the tumble dryer over the course of a year, considering the alternatives (e.g. indoor drying racks). You must enter the figure as a percentage Is there space for outside drying: Yes/No There has to be physical space for external drying outside of the property, rotary washing lines do not have to be seen as they are removable.

  28. Cold Appliances Short description: Number of cold appliances present Long description: How many are present (and normally plugged in)? Fridges Fridge-freezers Freezers The only pitfall here is to avoid any misunderstanding with the customer of definitions, by using the terminology ‘stand-alone freezers’, ‘stand-alone refrigerators’ and ‘fridge-freezers’. This should avoid a fridge freezer being counted twice as a fridge and a freezer. Wine coolers / beer fridges are counted as fridges

  29. Appliances

  30. Cooking Hob type and size, and oven type What type of hob is present What type of oven is present Choose from: • Gas • Electric • Gas/Electric • Range, and the fuel used • Other Hob size • Large (more than 4 burners) • Normal Beware ‘look-alike’ ranges, which are functionally just normal cookers. Record as a range cooker only if it stays hot all the time.

  31. Cooking Range cooker selection: Always Hot (All Year) Always Hot (Winter) -Should have a Summer Winter Switch

  32. Bill Data Bill Data = amount of each fuel used during a recent 12 month period and a code number indicating the reliability of the data. This should be based on the best evidence available, Bill data (Fuel bills which often contains an annual usage figure) Fuel delivery receipts/invoices (e.g. for oil, LPG etc…) This evidence must relate to the current occupants and the current dwelling. In some cases there will be no evidence and ‘unknown’ should be recorded, for example if the occupants have recently moved in. The reliability code is used to set an appropriate range of uncertainty for the outputs.

  33. Bill Data

  34. Bill Data The annual fuel should be recorded in kWh where possible for electricity and metered gas. For other fuels record the quantity: - mains gas: cubic metres or cubic feet - LPG: litres or kg - heating oil: litres - solid fuel: tonnes or kg If the data does not relate to 12 months, a period between 11 and 13 months is acceptable but there must be no gaps. Record the period to which the bill data relates. In some cases information may only be available on the amount paid for fuels. In this case record the total amount for each fuel concerned.

  35. Fuel Tariffs The fuel tariffs paid by this household. Obtain the information from fuel bills. Tariffs for electricity and mains gas are either in the form of a: standing charge and a unit price or a unit price for a first number of units and another unit price for additional units: Record all details. In the case of LPG, oil and solid fuels record the total number of units purchased and the total amount paid.

  36. Information Collection for the Occupancy Assessment

  37. Data to be Collected for Input

  38. Data to be Collected for Input

  39. Data to be Collected for Input

  40. Data to be Collected for Input

  41. Data to be Collected for Input

  42. Data to be Collected for Input

  43. Data to be Collected for Input

  44. Data to be Collected for Input

  45. Data to be Collected for Input

  46. Data to be Collected for Input

  47. Bills We will now look at a couple of example bills and how to take data from them

  48. Questions?

  49. Web Links www.stroma.com/certification Contacts Stroma Certification Ltd. 4 Pioneer Way, Castleford, WF10 5QU 0845 621 11 11 training@stroma.com

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