4.7 Article

Extending urban energy transitions to the mid-tier: Insights into energy efficiency from the management of HVAC maintenance in 'mid-tier' office buildings

Journal

ENERGY POLICY
Volume 174, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.enpol.2022.113415

Keywords

Urban energy transitions; Mid-tier office buildings; HVAC maintenance; Australia

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Older, smaller, and poorer quality commercial buildings are crucial for urban energy transitions and offer significant opportunities for energy retrofits. However, the sector lags behind premium office buildings due to different ownership structures, tenant profiles, and facilities management regimes. This paper presents empirical evidence on managing energy in mid-tier office buildings in Australia, focusing on HVAC systems, and identifies limits, opportunities, and policy imperatives for energy efficiency improvements.
Older, smaller and poorer quality commercial buildings (the 'mid-tier') make up much of the commercial building stock and are crucial for urban energy transitions. Action must extend beyond new commercial buildings and high-end building retrofit projects to realise deep decarbonisation of the built environment. Mid - tier buildings offer substantial opportunity for energy retrofits, though the sector lags behind premium office buildings. Comparatively, different ownership structures, tenant profiles, and facilities management regimes challenge the value-proposition for energy transition, and little is known about how to leverage energy per- formance improvements in this crucial sector. Focussing on the management of heating, ventilation and air- conditioning (HVAC) systems as an entry point for improvement, this paper presents empirical evidence from the largest survey conducted with Australian HVAC contractors, facility managers, and system engineers to date. The results explicate the realities of managing energy in mid-tier office buildings in Australia as a socio-technical undertaking. Our analysis identifies limits and opportunities for shaping energy efficiency of HVAC maintenance, focussed on issues pertaining to workforce, building and systems, and maintenance practices. Further, we draw out policy imperatives needed to address hurdles created by multiple market failures that complicate energy transition in mid-tier buildings.

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