Energy simulation and LCA for macro-scale analysis of eco-innovations in the housing stock
Purpose Energy consumption of buildings is one of the major drivers of environmental impacts. Life cycle assessment
(LCA) may support the assessment of burdens and benefits associated to eco-innovations aiming at reducing these
environmental impacts. Energy efficiency policies however typically focus on the meso- or macro-scale, while interventions
are typically taken at the micro-scale. This paper presents an approach that bridges this gap by using the results
of energy simulations and LCA studies at the building level to estimate the effect of micro-scale eco-innovations on the
macro-scale, i.e. the housing stock in Europe.
Methods LCA and dynamic energy simulations are integrated to accurately assess the life cycle environmental burdens
and benefits of eco-innovation measures at the building level. This allows quantitatively assessing the effectiveness of
these measures to lower the energy use and environmental impact of buildings. The analysis at this micro-scale focuses
on 24 representative residential buildings within the EU. For the upscaling to the EU housing stock, a hybrid approach is
used. The results of the micro-scale analysis are upscaled to the EU housing stock scale by adopting the eco-innovation
measures to (part of) the EU building stock (bottom–up approach) and extrapolating the relative impact reduction
obtained for the reference buildings to the baseline stock model. The reference buildings in the baseline stock model
have been developed by European Commission-Joint Research Centre based on a statistical analysis (top–down approach)
of the European housing stock. The method is used to evaluate five scenarios covering various aspects: building
components (building envelope insulation), technical installations (renewable energy), user behaviour (night setback of
the setpoint temperature), and a combined scenario.
Results and discussion Results show that the proposed combination of bottom–up and top–down approaches allow accurately
assessing the impact of eco-innovation measures at the macro-scale. The results indicate that a combination of policy measures is
necessary to lower the environmental impacts of the building stock to a significative extent.
Conclusions Interventions addressing energy efficiency at building level may lead to the need of a trade-off between resource
efficiency and environmental impacts. LCA integrated with dynamic energy simulation may help unveiling the potential improvements
and burdens associated to eco-innovations.
ALLACKER Karen;
CASTELLANI Valentina;
BALDINELLI Giorgio;
BIANCHI Francesco;
BALDASSARRI Catia;
SALA Serenella;
2019-06-07
SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
JRC110357
0948-3349 (online),
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11367-018-1548-3,
https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC110357,
10.1007/s11367-018-1548-3 (online),
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