定义“智能”能源改造

E. Hoffman, Lori Ferriss
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本研究以一个典型的高等教育校园改造项目为例,对“智能”能源改造进行了调查和建模,即考虑了改造的碳回报和成本回报,以最小的碳和成本投资提供最大的碳减排。该研究测试了一个创新的过程,该过程结合了几种相互关联的分析方法,以确定最大限度减少碳排放的最佳建筑改造范围。其中包括量化围护结构各个部件的热阻的热分析,校准和确定整个建筑性能的能源建模,以及计算具体影响的生命周期评估。将这些工具与成本估算相结合,使设计团队和业主能够评估现有建筑围护结构、建筑系统和主要能源的潜在干预投资的财务和环境回报。本案例研究展示了一个可复制的过程,通过迭代分析来优化具体碳和操作碳。这个过程表明,当考虑到生命周期的碳排放和成本时,并不是所有的节能措施都值得追求——深度能源改造并不一定是明智的能源改造。此外,能源改造应考虑适当的解决办法,既能立即减少,又能通过未来可获得的绿色能源进一步减少。为了减少建筑行业的排放并实现关键的气候目标,设计和建筑行业必须严格分析具体影响与运营影响的权衡,而不是默认传统的最佳实践假设来实现关键的气候目标。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Defining the “Smart” Energy Retrofit
This research uses a case study of a prototypical higher education campus renovation project to investigate and model a “smart” energy retrofit—one that considers the carbon payback as well as the cost payback of the renovation to target strategic energy retrofit measures that provide maximum carbon reductions with minimum carbon and cost investment. The study tested an innovative process that incorporated several interrelated analytical methodologies to determine the optimal building renovation scope for maximum carbon reductions. These included thermal analysis to quantify the thermal resistance of individual components of the envelope, energy modeling to calibrate and determine whole building performance, and life cycle assessment to calculate embodied impacts. Using these tools in concert with cost estimating allowed the design team and owner to evaluate the financial and environmental return on investment of potential interventions in the existing building envelope, building systems, and primary energy sources. This case study demonstrates a replicable process to optimize both embodied and operational carbon through iterative analysis. The process illustrates that not all energy-conserving measures are worth pursuing when taken in the context of life cycle carbon and costs-a deep energy retrofit is not necessarily a smart energy retrofit. Additionally, energy retrofits should consider solutions that are appropriate to make immediate reductions while enabling further reductions through the future availability of greener energy sources. To reduce emissions from the building sector and achieve critical climate targets, the design and construction industry must rigorously analyze tradeoffs of embodied versus operations impacts, rather than defaulting to traditional best practice assumptions to meet critical climate targets.
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