An exergy-based analysis of the effects of public incentives on the so-called “energy efficiency” of the residential sector, with emphasis on primary resource use and economics of scale

Alfonso Biondi, Piermaria Caponi, Carlo Cecere, Enrico Sciubba
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Abstract

Improving building efficiency is essential for reducing energy consumption, greenhouse gas emissions, and operational costs. In OECD Countries the average share of the Residential and Commercial Sector for space conditioning accounts for 30–37% of the cumulative final energy use. The current situation is somewhat typical of post-industrialized Countries: while the technology for reducing the external thermal losses and for installing more energy-conscious devices and procedures (including real-time monitoring and better design of the enclosures) is readily available, the cost of such measures is often perceived as excessive for the private user. For this reason, some governments have resolved to launch incentivization campaigns to encourage both private and public actors to invest in building efficiency. This strategy has been successful and its large-scale application -even if enacted on a preliminary basis- led to substantial reductions of the energy load per square meter −50 to 100 kWh/(m2yr)- so that subsidies and incentives are likely to assume a major role in shaping the energy conversion market. Technologies that are deemed “more environmental benign” or “of strategic interest” will receive institutional funding to promote their implementation, the funds being allocated both to design techniques, new materials and less energivorous devices. Since the funding is usually provided in the form of tax rebates, this approach is not devoid of problems: in fact, previous campaigns at regional and national level in the primary Energy Conversion and in the Transportation Sector have resulted in monumental failures. While it is clearly in the interest of a community to enact a reduction of their final energy uses, it is also true that such incentivization plans, if not properly and carefully implemented, may constitute an economic and ecological “doping” of the market (detail price increases, material and components shortages, etc.). This paper is a follow-up of a previous study conducted in 2021–22 that proposed a rational and thermodynamic-based approach to the issue: in that paper we presented an innovative cost/benefit procedure that considers the primary exergy savings of an “energy saving” intervention and the installation/operation costs and combines them with the statistically foreseeable savings in the improvement of the building seismic class. The method is intended to serve as a possible model for future policy decisions, and it makes use of the fundamental principles of Exergy Analysis augmented by a conventional cost/benefit analysis and by basic resilience considerations. The case study analyzed in the previous paper is re-examined here in the light of some recent normative developments the Eco-Sisma-Bonus (“Superbonus”), the incentivization plan launched between 2014 and 2020 by the Italian Government.
对公共激励措施对住宅部门所谓 "能效 "的影响进行基于放能的分析,重点是初级资源利用和规模经济学
提高建筑效率对于减少能源消耗、温室气体排放和运营成本至关重要。在经济合作与发展组织(OECD)国家中,住宅和商业部门用于空间调节的平均份额占累计最终能源使用量的 30-37%。目前的情况在后工业化国家比较典型:虽然减少外部热损失和安装更具能源意识的设备和程序(包括实时监控和更好的围护结构设计)的技术一应俱全,但私人用户往往认为这些措施的成本过高。因此,一些国家的政府决心开展激励活动,鼓励私人和公共机构投资提高建筑能效。这一战略是成功的,它的大规模应用--即使只是初步实施--导致了每平方米能源负荷的大幅降低--50 到 100 千瓦时/(平方米/年),因此,补贴和激励措施很可能会在能源转换市场的形成过程中扮演重要角色。被认为 "更有利于环境 "或 "具有战略意义 "的技术将获得机构资助,以促进其实施,资金将分配给设计技术、新材料和低能耗设备。由于资金通常以退税的形式提供,这种方法并非没有问题:事实上,以前在地区和国家层面开展的初级能源转换和运输部门的活动都以巨大的失败告终。虽然减少最终能源消耗显然符合社区的利益,但如果实施不当、不谨慎,这些激励计划可能会对市场造成经济和生态方面的 "掺杂"(详细的价格上涨、材料和部件短缺等)。本文是 2021-22 年进行的一项研究的后续,该研究提出了一种基于热力学的合理方法来解决这一问题:在该论文中,我们提出了一种创新的成本/效益程序,该程序考虑了 "节能 "干预措施所节省的主要放热量和安装/运行成本,并将其与统计上可预见的建筑抗震等级提高所节省的费用相结合。该方法的目的是为未来的政策决策提供一个可能的模型,它利用了传统的成本/效益分析和基本的抗震性考虑因素,并补充了热能分析的基本原理。本文根据意大利政府在 2014 年至 2020 年期间推出的激励计划--Eco-Sisma-Bonus("Superbonus")--的最新规范发展情况,对上一篇论文中分析的案例研究进行了重新审查。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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