澳大利亚住宅建筑行业的能源效率对话:当前的实践和变革的机会

Erika Bartak, G. Warren-Myers, C. Heywood
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摘要

具有高运行能效的住房有可能为应对气候变化带来的全球环境挑战做出积极贡献。这些类型的住宅通过减少运营能源需求和相关的温室气体排放,有助于减缓气候变化。此外,此类住房可以提供社会和经济效益,如改善舒适度、健康和福祉以及降低生活成本,从而提高家庭在气候变化中的抵御能力。虽然这些潜在的好处是众所周知的,但在澳大利亚的新住房中采用更高的能源效率标准并不普遍。部分原因是强制性要求有限(与其他发达经济体的基准相比),以及消费者创造需求的限制——消费者、政府和行业利益相关者之间持续不断的“指责游戏”的两个重要特征。这项研究的重点是澳大利亚新住房的主要供应商,量住宅建筑商。这些组织在新住房供应系统中占据着有影响力的地位,为没有经验的购房者提供信息和指导,并为大型建筑供应链提供工作机会。但最近的研究表明,能源效率等可持续性措施并没有得到很好的推广或优先考虑。本文介绍了这项研究的初步结果,探讨了澳大利亚住宅建筑行业当前的能源效率“对话”。对选定的组织网站进行内容分析,用于建立数量房屋建筑商与潜在购房者之间当前对话的证据基础。然后,这些结果为与一系列体量住宅建筑组织和工作人员进行半结构化访谈的设计提供了信息。访谈探讨了相关的组织实践,并确定了更有效的能源效率对话的机会,作为在新住房中主流化更高能源效率表现的手段。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Energy Efficiency Conversation in the Australian Volume Home Building sector: Current practices and opportunities for change
Housing with high operational energy efficiency has the potential to positively contribute towards the global environmental challenge of climate change. These types of homes contribute to climate change mitigation through reduced operational energy demand and associated greenhouse gas emissions. In addition, such homes can improve household resilience in a changing climate, by providing social and financial benefits such as improved comfort, health and wellbeing, and reduced cost of living. Although these potential benefits are well known, the adoption of higher standards of energy efficiency in new Australian housing is not widespread. This is in part a result of limited mandatory requirements (compared to the benchmarks of other developed economies), and limitations to demand creation by consumers – two contributing features of an on-going ‘blame game’ between consumer, government and industry stakeholders. This study focuses on the dominant providers of new housing in Australia, the volume home builders. These organisations occupy an influential position in the system of new housing supply, informing and directing the choices of inexperienced homebuyers, and providing work opportunities to a large construction supply chain. But recent studies reveal that sustainability measures such as energy efficiency are not well promoted or prioritised by the sector. This paper presents preliminary findings from the study, exploring the current energy efficiency ‘conversation’ within the Australian volume home building sector. A content analysis of selected organisational websites is used to establish an evidence base of the current conversation between volume home builders and their potential homebuyers. These results then inform the design of semi-structured interviews with a range of volume home building organisations and staff. Interviews explore relevant organisational practices, and identify opportunities for a more productive energy efficiency conversation, as a means of mainstreaming higher energy efficiency performance in new housing.
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