Sustainable Cities and Society | Vol.27, Issue.0 | | Pages 32-41
Co-alignment of comfort and energy saving objectives for U.S. office buildings and restaurants
Post-occupancy research shows that only 11% of commercial buildings met the ASHRAE thermal comfort standard. Many buildings are too warm in winter and/or too cool in summer, wasting energy and not providing comfort. We investigate potential energy savings in U.S. offices and restaurants if thermostat settings are changed according the updated ASHRAE 55-2013 comfort model that accounts for outdoor temperature and clothing choice for different climate zones. We develop eQUEST building models calibrated to reproduce energy consumption statistics. Changes in energy consumption due to the new settings are analyzed for 14 cities, results are extrapolated to estimate potential national savings. We find that, depending on the climate zone, each degree increase in the summer saves 0.6% to 0.5% of total building electricity consumption. Each degree the winter setting is lowered saves 1.2%–8.7% of total building natural gas consumption. With new thermostat settings, national savings are 2.5% of the total consumed in all office buildings and restaurants, summing up to national savings of 69.6 million GJ annually, comparable to all 2015 total solar PV generation in U.S. The goals of improved comfort and energy/economic savings are thus co-aligned, raising the importance of thermostat management as an energy efficiency strategy.
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Co-alignment of comfort and energy saving objectives for U.S. office buildings and restaurants
Post-occupancy research shows that only 11% of commercial buildings met the ASHRAE thermal comfort standard. Many buildings are too warm in winter and/or too cool in summer, wasting energy and not providing comfort. We investigate potential energy savings in U.S. offices and restaurants if thermostat settings are changed according the updated ASHRAE 55-2013 comfort model that accounts for outdoor temperature and clothing choice for different climate zones. We develop eQUEST building models calibrated to reproduce energy consumption statistics. Changes in energy consumption due to the new settings are analyzed for 14 cities, results are extrapolated to estimate potential national savings. We find that, depending on the climate zone, each degree increase in the summer saves 0.6% to 0.5% of total building electricity consumption. Each degree the winter setting is lowered saves 1.2%–8.7% of total building natural gas consumption. With new thermostat settings, national savings are 2.5% of the total consumed in all office buildings and restaurants, summing up to national savings of 69.6 million GJ annually, comparable to all 2015 total solar PV generation in U.S. The goals of improved comfort and energy/economic savings are thus co-aligned, raising the importance of thermostat management as an energy efficiency strategy.
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