4.7 Article

Energy (in)efficient comfort practices: How building retrofits influence energy behaviours in multi-apartment buildings

Journal

ENERGY POLICY
Volume 168, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.enpol.2022.113123

Keywords

Energy performance gap; Energy -efficient buildings; Social practice theory; Occupant behaviour; Occupant -building -interaction; Thermal comfort

Funding

  1. BMWK (Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Climate Action) [FKZ 67KF0098AB]
  2. EffKom - energy -efficient residential comfort: user -oriented develop- ment of an automated system for the control of space heating? [FKZ 67KF0098AB]
  3. BMBF (Federal Ministry of Education and Research)
  4. BMWK (Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Climate Action) [FKZ 67KF0098AB]
  5. [03SBE114D]

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Insulation and sealing of building envelopes are effective strategies to improve energy efficiency and reduce energy consumption. However, these measures may also result in energy performance gaps, where actual consumption exceeds calculated demand. The interactions between occupants and buildings play a crucial role in contributing to these gaps, leading to unintended negative consequences for energy consumption.
One of the main strategies employed to increase the energy efficiency of buildings is the insulation and sealing of building envelopes. This has led to considerable reductions in energy consumption in recent decades. However, with the increasing efficiency of the building envelope, a contrary effect is also evident: energy performance gaps (EPGs), the phenomenon where actual consumption exceeds calculated demand. While EPGs have often been associated with rebound effects, socio-technical studies argue that it is the interactions between occupants and buildings (or building technologies), which have negative, often unintended, consequences for energy con-sumption. To analyse these interactions and their contribution to EPGs, we conducted a survey of 34 households in two moderately insulated multi-apartment buildings and calculated EPGs at the apartment level. Based on the results, we argue that increasing the building insulation can lead to negative interaction effects because occu-pants adapt to the changes in building behaviour, producing a shift in energy consumption for the whole building. Building inertia and reduced feedback are likely accompanied by higher indoor temperatures and increased ventilation. We suggest that a better understanding of these mechanisms is necessary to evaluate the real savings of different efficiency measures, and discuss various implications for policy and research.

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