Operational Insights and Future Potential of the Database for Positive Energy Districts
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. State of the Art in PED Databases
3. Aim and Methodology
3.1. Phase 1—DB General Framework and Categories
3.2. Phase 2—PED DB Fine Tuning and Implementation Process
3.2.1. Parameters Alignment and Glossary
3.2.2. PED DB Implementation Process
- Online form questionnaires: Two user-friendly online questionnaires, referred to as ‘input forms’, were created for efficient data collection. These forms were designed in alignment with DB structure, resulting in one for PED/PED-relevant case studies and PED labs, capturing information from sections A, B, and C (refer to Paragraph 4.1 for details). Another form targeted funded projects/initiatives, collecting data related to section D (refer to Paragraph 4.1 for details). These questionnaires were developed with crucial input from IT experts from Boutik.pt and Czech Technical University in Prague (CVUT) to: (1) integrate a glossary, encompassing definitions of parameters and related filling instructions (see Appendix A); (2) enable the saving of inputs for later completion; and (3) ensure easy accessibility through a provided link. During this phase, the role of the DB Editor was introduced. DB editors are individuals responsible for facilitating the data collection process. They contact the reference person for each PED case study or project, provide support, and guidance when necessary, review the completeness and accuracy of input data, and validate online publication. DB Editors were selected and trained from various initiatives involved in the prior PED DB conceptualization and development (e.g., CA PED-EU-NET, JPI UE, IEA EBC Annex 83, DUT, etc.).
- Web platform: The design of the online platform entailed a close collaboration with a team of IT experts [12]. Their invaluable support led to the development of two key operational tools: (1) the backend web platform, and (2) the frontend web platform. The backend platform serves as the administrative hub for the DB. It enables the generation of input forms for data providers, facilitates the review of all input data, and oversees the publication of case studies and projects once finalized. On the other hand, the frontend web platform was crafted for data visualization, comparison, and filtering. Three open-access web pages were identified as essential components of the frontend: (i) a map view to illustrate the geographic distribution of case studies, enabling the identification of experiences and solutions by specific countries or regions of interest; (ii) a table view to list selected case studies and facilitate comparisons; and (iii) a projects list for visualizing and comparing various projects.
3.3. Phase 3—Next Steps and Functionalities from Web DB
- Decision making support tools: Intended as a data-driven systems, where PED information serves as the primary material for informed decision-making at the district level through computerized systems. This approach significantly enhances the effectiveness and efficiency of the decision-making process in PEDs, decreasing technical, spatial, and socioeconomic barriers in district energy planning, while also providing the flexibility to tailor reports, roadmaps, and presentations to meet the specific requirements of decision makers;
- Advanced learning tool: Consisting of certain technologies, such as Artificial Intelligence, Machine Learning, Blockchain, Big Data, Internet of Things, Augmented Reality, Cloud Computing, etc., that have revolutionized traditional database systems. Machine learning, with its advanced learning algorithms, stands out as a ground-breaking technology with significant implications for the future. It can provide accurate predictions based on past experiences, making its integration into the PED Database a valuable tool for stakeholders to develop more effective strategies from current conditions to the urban transition;
- Database Query: Allowing to enhance the data management capabilities within the PED database through adaptive and approximate query processing. This approach emphasizes the use of runtime feedback to modify query processing, aiming to achieve better response times and more efficient CPU utilization, as opposed to the traditional ‘optimize-then-execute’ approach;
- Import and export updatable Database: Support practical methods for backing up critical PED data or transferring these metadata between various versions. These methods provide self-service restoration capability from system-generated backups, ensuring consistently faster, interoperable and predictable import/export performance without causing throttling by the database service. Running client applications from a Virtual Machine in the same region as the PED database helps avoid performance issues related to network latency.
4. Results
4.1. PED DB Sections and Related Parameters
- The central nucleus of the Database collecting PED/PED relevant case studies and PED Labs—constituted by section A aimed at framing the context where the PED is developed—i.e., A1 ‘Global characteristics’ (Subparagraph 4.1.1), section A2 ‘Technological aspects’ (Subparagraph 4.1.2), and section A3 ‘Non-Technological aspects’ (Subparagraph 4.1.3)—section B aimed at deepening the concept of PED Case and/or PED Lab according to the classification provided in section A—i.e., B1 ‘PED case study in detail’ (Subparagraph 4.1.4) and B2 ‘PED Lab in detail’ (Subparagraph 4.1.5)—and section C aimed at analysing the driving factors and the obstacles faced during the PED planning and implementation process—i.e., C1 ‘Drivers and Barriers’ (Subparagraph 4.1.6). The central part of the Database is available online [12] in open access mode, collecting a total of 109 parameters and 455 answer options.
- A series of supporting sections facilitating the understanding of PED concept replication on a larger scale. This part is constituted by Section D ‘General Project/Initiative’ (Subparagraph 4.1.7) collecting the funded projects and initiatives experimenting PED/PED relevant concepts, section E ‘National Policies/Strategies’ mapping the national regulatory framework conditions facilitating the uptake of PED practices and section F ‘Technological and Non-technological solutions’ deepening the adopted innovative and context-tailored solution in each PED case/lab. Currently, Section D is fully developed and available online [12], while Sections E and F are in their definition phase and still not available online.
4.1.1. Section A1 ‘Global Characteristics’
4.1.2. Section A2 ‘Technological Aspects’
4.1.3. Section A3 ‘Non-Technological Aspects’
4.1.4. Section B1 ‘PED Case Studies in Detail’
4.1.5. Section B2 ‘PED Lab in detail’
4.1.6. Section C1 ‘Drivers and Barriers’
4.1.7. Section D1 ‘General Projects/Initiatives’
4.2. Results of PED DB Implementation
4.2.1. The Online Questionnaires On-Line Platform: Backend and Frontend
4.2.2. The Online Platform
4.3. Preliminary Analysis of 23 Mapped Case Studies
5. Discussion
6. Future Works
6.1. Gaps and Needs for Future PED DB Development
- How would you use a database tool to learn about PED development process (i.e., using static information for dynamic decision-making)?
- What would be your main interest in consulting the Database?
- How do you prioritise the basic functions of a digital tool/PED DB?
- How do you prioritise the basic properties/features of a digital tool/PED DB?
- What are the components/dimensions that need to be included in a PED DB? (in four categories—General, Quantitative—Energy and Emissions, Human/Social and Lessons-Learnt and recommendations).
6.2. Next Steps for Data Collection: Digitalization and Future Application Potential
6.3. Storytelling and Roadmap: A Stakeholders Tailored Approach
7. Conclusions
- Will the PED DB tool be designed following a systemic approach, able to support cities in taking advantage of this rapid and challenging technological and non-technological change and to reach the global commitments of the 2030 Agenda in cities?
- Can the learning and awareness goals be achieved through ontological reasoning using big data and machine learning, without losing contact with the real world and local context?
8. Patents
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Nomenclature
CA | COST Action |
COST | European Cooperation in Science and Technology |
DB | Database |
DUT | Driving Urban Transition |
EERA JPSC | European Energy Research Alliance Joint Programme on Smart Cities |
EIP-SCC | European Innovation Partnership on Smart Cities and Communities |
ERRIN | European Regions Research and Innovation Network |
EU | European |
GHG | Greenhouse Gasses |
IEA-EBC | International Energy Agency’s Energy in Buildings and Communities |
IT | Information Technology |
JPI UE | Joint Programming Initiative Urban Europe |
KPIs | Key Performance Indicators |
NECPs | National Energy and Climate Plans |
PED | Positive Energy District |
SCIS | Smart Cities Information System |
SCM | Smart Cities Marketplace |
SDGs | Sustainable Development Goals |
SEAPs | Sustainable Energy Action Plans |
SECAPs | Sustainable Energy and Climate Action Plans |
SET | Strategic Energy Technology |
SMEs | Small and Medium Enterprises |
SRIA | Strategic Research and Innovation |
SUMP | Sustainable urban mobility plan |
WGs | Working Groups |
Appendix A. PED Database Glossary
ID | Parameter Title | Parameter Definition/Answer Options Definition | Instruction |
---|---|---|---|
A1 P001 | Name of the PED case study/PED Lab (*) | N/A | Name the city, neighbourhood/district where the case study is located. |
A1 P002 | Map/aerial view/photos/graphic details/leaflet (*) | N/A | Please upload at least one file (min 150 DPI). |
A1 P003 | Categorisation of the PED site (*) | See individual answer options’ definitions below: •PED case study: district-level project with high level of aspiration in terms of energy efficiency, energy flexibility and energy production. The project has to address of the aspects listed in the JPI UE PED Framework Definition, including the ambition to achieve annual energy positive balance; •PED relevant case study: district-level project with high level of aspiration in terms of energy efficiency, energy flexibility, and energy production. The project does not necessarily have to meet annual energy positive balance, but it has to address aspects listed in the JPI UE PED Framework Definition; •PED Lab: PED Labs are pilot actions that provide opportunities to experiment with planning and deployment of PEDs, as well as provide seeding ground for new ideas, solutions, and services to develop. PED Labs follow an integrative approach including technology, spatial, regulatory, financial, legal, social, and economic perspectives. | What is the categorisation of your PED? |
A1 P004 | Targets of the PED case study/PED Lab (*) | See the definitions of individual answer options below: •Air quality and urban comfort: the objective of improving air quality is aimed at reducing the concentration of the five main pollutants: O3, NO2, SO2, PM2.5, and PM10; •Circularity: circular systems employ reuse, sharing, repair, refurbishment, remanufacturing, and recycling to create a closed-loop system, minimizing the use of resource inputs and the creation of waste, pollution, and carbon emissions. In the case of PED, the revalorization of waste (such as residues from the different sectors) for the energy production is prioritized, but many other pathways could be taken, considering the cycle of water, food, etc.; •Climate neutrality: climate neutrality means that on a period basis the carbon dioxide emissions within the limits of the district are compensated with the exported energy or by carbon capture; •Electrification: electrification is the process in which the supply of any energy needs of a district and/or city, such as the heating needs or the mobility sector, are supplied by electricity-driven technologies; •Energy Community: energy community refers to a wide range of collective energy actions that involve citizens’ participation in the energy system. Energy communities can be understood as a way to ‘organize’ collective energy actions around open, democratic participation, and governance and the provision of benefits for the members or the local community; •Net-zero emission: a net-zero emissions building produces at least as much emissions-free renewable energy as it uses from emissions-producing energy sources. •Net zero energy cost: the amount of money the utility pays the building owner for the energy the building exports to the grid is at least equal to the amount the owner pays the utility for the energy services and energy used over the year; •Annual energy surplus: the total annual energy balance is positive, therefore the area will deliver, on average, an energy surplus to be shared with other urban or peri-urban zones; •Self-sufficiency (energy autonomous): self-sufficiency means that within a year, the district will never import energy from outside the boundaries (e.g., consume electricity or gas from the grids); •Maximise self-sufficiency: maximise self-sufficiency means that within a year, the district is allowed to import energy from outside the boundaries, however the energy content of the imported energy products to the district should be less than (or equal to) the energy content of the energy products exported from the district. Thus, the “net imports” is zero or negative. | Check all that apply. |
A1 P005 | Phase of the PED case study/PED Lab (*) | See individual answer options’ definitions below: •Planning stage: Case Study or Lab is being designed; •Implementation stage: Case Study or LAB is being deployed; •Completed: Case Study or LAB is already finalized; •In operation. Case Study or LAB is being used. | Choose one of the following answers. |
A1 P006 | Start Date | N/A | Please specify starting date from planning (month/year) |
A1 P007 | End Date | N/A | Please specify the end date to commissioning (month/year). If not available, provide estimate. |
A1 P008 | Reference Project | N/A | Indicate if the case study/PED lab is part of any publicly funded project (e.g., Horizon 2020 project, Interreg project, etc.). Please choose from existing projects in the drop-down menu. If your project is not available there, please fill in the Input form on General Projects/Initiatives first (Section D). |
A1 P009 | Data availability | N/A | Please indicate which datasets would you be willing to share with the research and practitioner community in the future? |
A1 P010 | Sources | Any publication, link to website, deliverable referring to the PED/PED Lab | Please provide any additional resources with details about your case study/PED Lab. |
A1 P011 | Geographic coordinates (*) | Geographic coordinate system, latitude and longitude | You can learn the coordinates by clicking on a map on Google Maps or another map portal. Please, consider the district’s central point. |
A1 P012 | Country (*) | N/A | N/A |
A1 P013 | City (*) | N/A | N/A |
A1 P014 | Climate Zone—Köppen Geiger classification (*) | The most widely used climate classification system. It divides climates into five main climate groups based on seasonal precipitation and temperature patterns. •Af: Tropical-Rainforest •Am: Tropical-Monsoon •Aw: Tropical-Savanna •BSh: Arid-Steppe-Hot •BSk: Arid-Steppe-Cold •BWh: Arid-Desert-Hot •BWk: Arid-Desert-Cold •Cfa: Temperate-Without_dry_season-Hot_Summer •Cfb: Temperate-Without_dry_season-Warm_Summer •Cfc: Temperate-Without_dry_season-Cold_Summer •Csa: Temperate-Dry_Summer-Hot_Summer •Csb: Temperate-Dry_Summer-Warm_Summer •Cwa: Temperate-Dry_Winter-Hot_Summer •Cwb: Temperate-Dry_Winter-Warm_Summer •Dfa: Cold-Without_dry_season-Very_Cold_Winter •Dfb: Cold-Without_dry_season-Warm_Summer •Dfc: Cold-Without_dry_season-Cold_Summer •Dsa: Cold-Dry_Summer-Hot_Summer •Dsb: Cold-Dry_Summer-Warm_Summer •Dsc: Cold-Dry_Summer-Cold_Summer •Dsd: Cold-Dry_Summer-Very_Cold_Winter •Dwa: Cold-Dry_Winter-Hot_Summer •Dwb: Cold-Dry_Winter-Warm_Summer •Dwc: Cold-Dry_Winter-Cold_Summer •Dwd: Cold-Dry_Winter-Very_Cold_Winter •EF: Polar-Frost •ET: Polar-Tundra | Choose one of the following answers. |
A1 P015 | District boundary | See the definitions of individual answer options below: •Functional: buildings are not close to each other, but they are interconnected, thanks to a gas, electric, or heating network. •Geographic: the boundaries are delimited by spatial–physical limits, including delineated buildings, sites, and infrastructures. •Off-Grid: district is self-sufficient or autonomous, which means it is not connected to any utility grids (e.g., electricity, water, gas, and sewer networks). This is advantageous in isolated locations where normal utilities cannot reach and is attractive to those who want to reduce environmental impact and cost of living. •Virtual: energy demand is covered by a generation unit (e.g., a wind turbine), which is typically shared with other consumption points and located outside the geographical boundaries of the district, then it could be considered a virtual boundary •Other—specify: N/A | Choose one of the following answers. |
A1 P016 | Ownership of the case study/PED Lab (*) | See individual answer options’ definitions below: •Private: Ownership of a private individual or organization. •Public: Ownership of an industry, asset, or enterprise by the state or a public body representing a community as opposed to a private party. •Mixed: Ownership of the assets within the PED by both public and private entities. | Choose one of the following answers. |
A1 P017 | Ownership of the land/physical infrastructure (*) | N/A | Choose one of the following answers. |
A1 P018 | Number of buildings in PED | N/A | Only numbers may be entered in this field |
A1 P019 | Conditioned space | Closed building area, where there is intentional control of the space thermal conditions within defined limits by using natural, electrical, or mechanical means | Only numbers may be entered in this field |
A1 P020 | Total ground area | The ground space includes green areas and streets within the defined physical boundaries. | Only numbers may be entered in this field |
A1 P021 | Floor area ratio: conditioned space/total ground area | N/A | This parameter is automatically calculated |
A1 P022 | Financial schemes (*) | N/A | Please select the adopted funding scheme and if available, add the value in EUR. |
A1 P023 | Economic Targets | N/A | Check all that apply. |
A1 P024 | More comment | N/A | Include any additional comments about general characteristics that you wish to share. |
A1 P025 | Estimated PED case study/PED LAB costs | N/A | Mil. EUR |
A1 P026 | Contact person for general enquiries—name (*) | Name of the person who filled in the form | N/A |
A1 P027 | Contact person for general enquiries—organization (*) | Organization of the person who filled in the form (e.g., Municipality of…, University of…) | N/A |
A1 P028 | Contact person for general enquiries—affiliation (*) | Affiliation of the person who filled in the form | Choose one of the following answers. |
A1 P029 | Contact person for general enquiries—e-mail (*) | Contact e-mail of the person who filled in the form | N/A |
A1 P030 | Contact person for other special topics—name | Name of the project manager of the site | N/A |
A1 P031 | Contact person for other special topics—e-mail | Contact e-mail of the project manager of the site | Fill in only when you have consent of the person/if the e-mail address is publicly available. |
ID | Parameter Title | Parameter Definition/Answer Options Definition | Instruction |
---|---|---|---|
A2 P001 | Fields of application | See the definitions of individual answer options below: •Energy efficiency: energy efficiency simply means using less energy to perform the same task—that is, eliminating energy waste. •Energy flexibility: in the electricity system, flexibility helps to maintain or restore the stability of a system, because only by reacting flexibly to constantly changing conditions—fluctuating electricity consumption, fluctuating electricity generation—is the system is balanced. •Energy production: In terms of Renewable Energy production •E-mobility: e-mobility refers to clean and efficient transport, using electric vehicles, powered either by batteries or by hydrogen fuel cells. •Urban management: N/A •Urban comfort and air quality: N/A •Digital technologies: digitalization can be thought of as the increasing interaction and convergence between the digital and physical worlds. Digital technologies are set to make energy systems around the world more connected, intelligent, efficient, reliable, and sustainable. Stunning advances in data, analytics, and connectivity are enabling a range of new digital applications such as smart appliances, shared mobility, and 3D printing. Digitalized energy systems in the future may be able to identify who needs energy and deliver it at the right time, in the right place, and at the lowest cost. •Water use: water use refers to water used by end users (e.g., households, services, agriculture, industry) within a territory for a specific purpose such as domestic use, irrigation, or industrial processing. •Waste management: the new agenda for waste management thus focuses upon the development of more appropriate, sustainable definitions so that what is now commonly perceived as being waste will in fact be increasingly seen as resource-rich, ‘non-waste’. The role of waste management is explained as control of all waste-related activities, with the aim of preventing, minimizing or utilizing waste. •Air quality: in order to protect human health and the environment as a whole, it is particularly important to combat emissions of pollutants at source and to identify and implement the most effective emission reduction measures at a local, national, and community level. Therefore, emissions of harmful air pollutants should be avoided, prevented, or reduced and appropriate objectives set for ambient air quality by taking into account relevant World Health Organisation standards, guidelines, and programmes. •Construction materials: N/A •Other, please specify: N/A | Check all that apply. |
A2 P002 | Tools/strategies/methods applied | N/A | Which tools/strategies/methods do you apply? |
A2 P003 | Application of ISO52000 | ISO 52000–1:2017 establishes a systematic, comprehensive, and modular structure for assessing the energy performance of new and existing buildings (EPB) in a holistic way. | Do you apply ISO 52000? |
A2 P004 | Appliances included in the calculation of the energy balance | N/A | Are appliances included in the calculation of the energy balance? |
A2 P005 | Mobility included in the calculation of the energy balance | N/A | Is mobility included in the calculation of the energy balance? |
A2 P006 | Description of how mobility is included (or not included) in the calculation | N/A | How is mobility included (or not included) in the calculation? |
A2 P007 | Annual energy demand in buildings/Thermal demand | National standards, national statistical data (with estimated energy demand per square meter dependent on the climate zone of the area, etc.), measured data (if available), or bills can be used to calculate the thermal demand. Furthermore, when structural data of the building and data from the existing system are available, an energy modelling tool can be useful to estimate the demand. | Only numbers may be entered in these fields. |
A2 P008 | Annual energy demand in buildings/Electric Demand | National standards, national statistical data (with estimated energy demand per square meter dependent on the climate zone of the area, etc.), measured data (if available), or bills can be used to calculate the thermal demand. Furthermore, when structural data of the building and data from the existing system are available, an energy modelling tool can be useful to estimate the demand. | Only numbers may be entered in these fields. |
A2 P009 | Annual energy demand for e-mobility | N/A | Only numbers may be entered in these fields. |
A2 P010 | Annual energy demand for infrastructure | N/A | Public infrastructure (all except building and mobility). Only numbers may be entered in this field. |
A2 P011 | Annual renewable electricity production on-site during target year | After identifying which solutions will be considered for a certain district, energy systems can be listed and the connections between each other (schematics) and the renewable energy source that is supplied to it can be identified. Renewable sources for electricity production include wind, solar (solar photovoltaic and hybrid PVT), tide, wave and other ocean energy, hydropower, and biomass. | Only numbers may be entered in these fields. Please, specify production in GWh/annum. |
A2 P012 | Annual renewable thermal production on-site during target year | Renewable sources for thermal production include solar (solar thermal hybrid PVT), geothermal energy, biomass, landfill gas, sewage treatment plant gas, and biogas. | Only numbers may be entered in these fields. Please, specify production in GWh/annum. |
A2 P013 | Renewable resources on-site—Additional notes | N/A | According to the previous question, if some clarification is needed, please include them in this space. |
A2 P014 | Annual energy use | Annual sum of thermal energy use and electric energy use. Thermal Energy Use (TEU) refers to energy input into the heating, cooling, or hot water system to satisfy the energy needs for heating, cooling, or hot water, respectively. Electric Energy Use (EEU) refers to electricity directly consumed by buildings and e-vehicle charging (from grid or local RES as PV, wind, etc.) to be delivered to cover the energy needs (for DHW, heating, and cooling when an electricity-driven system is used; and ventilation, appliances, and lighting). | Only numbers may be entered in these fields. Please, specify production in GWh/annum. |
A2 P015 | Annual energy delivered | Energy supplied to the district (thermal and electricity) that is produced outside the district boundaries. Usually comes from heating/cooling networks, gas, or electric grids and feeds the energy systems available on-site in the district. Some of these energy flows can be quantified based on the meters, and in case of gas consumption, which is usually measured in m3, a conversion factor will be needed. The conversion factors shall be coherent with the choice of referring to gross calorific value or net calorific value. | Only numbers may be entered in these fields. Please, specify production in GWh/annum. |
A2 P016 | Annual non-renewable electricity production on-site during target year | N/A | Please specify, if non-renewable on-site production exists. In case, specify production in GWh/annum. |
A2 P017 | Annual non-renewable thermal production on-site during target year | N/A | Please specify, if non-renewable on-site production exists. In case, specify production in GWh/annum. |
A2 P018 | Annual renewable electricity imports from outside the boundary during target year | Similar to energy delivered definition, but just RES for electricity. | Only numbers may be entered in these fields. Please, specify production in GWh/annum. |
A2 P019 | Annual renewable thermal imports from outside the boundary during target year | Similar to energy delivered definition, but just RES for thermal. | Only numbers may be entered in these fields. Please, specify production in GWh/annum. |
A2 P020 | Share of RES on-site/RES outside the boundary | N/A | Automatic calculation |
A2 P021 | GHG-balance calculated for the PED | N/A | Is a GHG-balance calculated for the PED? If yes, provide the calculated value in tCO2/annum |
A2 P022 | KPIs related to the PED case study/PED Lab | N/A | Do you have any KPIs related to the PED case study/PED Lab? If yes, please specify the associated KPIs next to each relevant category. |
A2 P023 | Technological Solutions/Innovations—Energy Generation | N/A | Check all that apply. |
A2 P024 | Technological Solutions/Innovations—Energy Flexibility | See individual answer options’ definitions below: •Information and Communication: Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) is a broader term for Information Technology (IT), which refers to all communication technologies, including the internet, wireless networks, cell phones, computers, software, middleware, video-conferencing, social networking, and other media applications and services enabling users to access, retrieve, store, transmit, and manipulate information in a digital form. •Technologies (ICT): N/A •Energy management system: N/A •Demand-side management: DSM is the concept of influencing consumers’ energy demand in respect to the consumed amount of energy in general and the time dependent consumption behaviour, with the purpose of changing the load-shape according to the concurrent availability of electricity in the grid. the typical DSM concept was extended towards the idea of Dual Demand Side Management (2DSM), a concept controlling electrical and thermal energy flows on the local and on the city district level in a holistic way. •Smart electricity grid: N/A •Thermal Storage: N/A •Electric Storage: N/A •District Heating and Cooling; N/A •Smart metering and demand-responsive control systems: N/A •P2P—buildings: N/A •Other, please specify | Check all that apply. |
A2 P025 | Technological Solutions/Innovations—Energy Efficiency | See individual answer options’ definitions below: •Deep Retrofitting: •Energy efficiency measures in historic buildings: •High-performance new buildings: high performance buildings can thus deliver on the climate challenge by reducing the energy requirements of buildings to a point at which residual needs can be met by no or low-carbon energy sources; •Smart Public infrastructure (e.g., smart lighting): •Urban data platforms: •Mobile applications for citizens: a self-contained program or piece of software designed to fulfil a particular purpose. It is an application, especially as downloaded by a user to a mobile device; •Building services (HVAC and Lighting): •Smart irrigation: •Digital tracking for waste disposal: •Smart surveillance: •Other, please specify | Check all that apply. |
A2 P026 | Technological Solutions/Innovations—Mobility | N/A | Check all that apply. |
A2 P027 | Mobility strategies—Additional notes | N/A | Please share any additional notes about the applied strategy in mobility |
A2 P028 | Energy efficiency certificates | N/A | If present, please specify and/or enter notes. |
A2 P029 | Any other building/district certificates | N/A | If present, please specify and/or enter notes. |
ID | Parameter Title | Parameter Definition/Answer Options Definition | Instruction |
---|---|---|---|
A3 P001 | Relevant city/national strategy | City and national level approaches favouring energy transition and climate targets | Please explain the city strategy behind PED Development. To which city/national strategy is the case study/PED Lab referring to? Check all that apply. |
A3 P002 | Quantitative targets included in the city/national strategy | N/A | Does the city/national strategy include quantitative targets? If yes, please specify. |
A3 P003 | Strategies towards decarbonization of the gas grid | N/A | Check all that apply. |
A3 P004 | Identification of needs and priorities | N/A | Please explain the needs and priorities behind PED Development. |
A3 P005 | Sustainable behaviour | N/A | Please explain what kind of sustainable behaviours are present behind PED Development. |
A3 P006 | Economic strategies | N/A | Check all that apply. |
A3 P007 | Social models | N/A | Check all that apply. |
A3 P008 | Integrated urban strategies | N/A | Check all that apply. |
A3 P009 | Environmental strategies | N/A | Check all that apply. |
A3 P010 | Legal/Regulatory aspects | N/A | Please name the relevant legal/regulatory aspects dealt with in your PED/PED Lab. |
ID | Parameter Title | Parameter Definition/Answer Options Definition | Instruction |
---|---|---|---|
B1 P001 | PED/PED relevant concept definition | N/A | Specify why the district should be considered a PED/PED-relevant case study. |
B1 P002 | Motivation behind PED/PED relevant project development | N/A | Specify what is the purpose for implementing the PED Project and what were the reasons that led the initiator to start with PED development. |
B1 P003 | Environment of the case study area | See individual answer options’ definitions below: •Rural: / •Rurban: land in the countryside on the edge of a town or city, on which new housing, businesses, etc. are being built; •Suburban area: mixed-use or residential area, existing as part of a city/urban area, or as a separate residential community within commuting distance of one; •Urban area: area characterised by human settlement with a high population density and infrastructure of built environment. | Choose one of the following answers. |
B1 P004 | Type of district | N/A | Check all that apply. If the district combines new construction and renovated buildings, please check both options. |
B1 P005 | Case Study Context | See individual answer options’ definitions below: •Re-use Transformation Area: / •New Development: / •Retrofitting Area: / •Preservation Area: Protected areas or conservation areas are locations that receive protection because of their recognized natural, ecological, or cultural values. | Choose one of the following answers. |
B1 P006 | Year of construction | N/A | If the PED has already been implemented, provide information about the date of construction. |
B1 P007 | District population before intervention—Residential | N/A | Only numbers may be entered in this field. |
B1 P008 | District population after intervention—Residential | N/A | Only numbers may be entered in this field. |
B1 P009 | District population before intervention—Non-residential | N/A | Only numbers may be entered in this field. |
B1 P010 | District population after intervention—Non-residential | N/A | Only numbers may be entered in this field. |
B1 P011 | Population density before intervention | Calculated as Population Before Intervention/(Conditioned Area + Total Land Area) | This field is calculated automatically. |
B1 P012 | Population density after intervention | Calculated as Population Before Intervention/(Conditioned Area + Total Land Area) | This field is calculated automatically. |
B1 P013 | Building and Land Use before intervention | N/A | Check all that apply and, if possible, specify the sqm. |
B1 P014 | Building and Land Use after intervention | N/A | Check all that apply and, if possible, specify the sqm. |
ID | Parameter Title | Parameter Definition/Answer Options Definition | Instruction |
---|---|---|---|
B2 P001 | Scale of action | The scale of action defined for the PED Lab determines the type of experiments that can be done. Four options are available: building, campus, district, and virtual. The differences between them are based on the dimensions, boundary conditions, and the energy fluxes that can be evaluated by these facilities. | Choose one of the following answers. |
B2 P002 | Motivation for developing the PED Lab | See individual answer options’ definitions below: •Strategic: strategic motivation driven by governments or large commercial actors. Host by multiple projects; •Private: private motivation driven by private companies or industries. Hosted by private initiatives; •Civic: civic motivation driven by local urban actors such as universities, cities or urban developers. Hosted by stand-alone projects or city-districts; •Grassroots: grassroots motivation driven by urban actors in civic society or not for profit actors. Host by micro-projects or single projects. •Other, please specify | Check all that apply. |
B2 P003 | Lead partner that manages the PED Lab | N/A | Choose one of the following answers. |
B2 P004 | Collaborative partners that participate in the PED Lab | N/A | Check all that apply. |
B2 P005 | Incubation capacities of the PED Lab | N/A | Check all that apply. |
B2 P006 | Available facilities to test urban configurations in PED Lab | See individual answer options’ definitions below: •Buildings: buildings with different profiles: residential, offices, schools, industrial, etc.; •Demand-side management: combination of permanent and non-permanent techniques through Demand-side management; •Prosumers/P2P: customers that can produce and supply electricity and thermal energy; •Renewable generation: such as PV, wind, solar thermal collectors (low, medium, and high temperature), biomass, geothermal, etc.; •Non-renewable generation: Non-renewable generation means energy production based on fossil sources such as coal, oil, gas, etc.; •Energy storage: thermal and/electrical storage systems; •Energy networks: heating, cooling, and grid networks; •Efficiency measures: integration of efficient measures in the fields of buildings, generation, and distribution systems or storage systems. •Waste management: management of the waste treatments; •Water treatment: management of the water treatments; •Lighting: efficient lighting technologies; •E-mobility: sustainable transport and e-mobility; •Green areas: integration of innovative actions by using nature-based solutions; •User interaction/participation: integration of different models that consider the user involvement in the laboratory such us the influence of the user behaviour; •Information and Communication Technologies (ICT): implementation of technical innovation for technologies of communication in the fields of energy, buildings, lighting or mobility; •Ambient measures: ambient measures such as thermal monitoring, urban heat island, air quality, noise, lighting measures, etc.; •Social interactions: interactions between users, stakeholder involvement, etc.; •Sustainability processes: sustainable process that consider smart capabilities such as prioritisation algorithms, sensitivity analysis, or decisions making process; •Blockchain: blockchain technology based on: environmental sustainability, data protection, digital identity, cybersecurity, and interoperability; •Business models: viable business models implemented in the laboratory •Financial models: financial models such as demand side management, market prices; •Circular economy models: measures covering the whole life cycle: from production and consumption to waste management and the market for secondary raw materials; •Other, please specify | Check all that apply. |
B2 P007 | Synergies between facilities in the PED Lab | Identification of synergies between the different fields of activities in the laboratory. The full implementation of a complete PED requires analysing, in a combined way, different activities in the laboratory such as energy, market, economic aspects, or social aspects. The combination of these activities requires the optimization of resources, capacities, evaluation, and analysis tools | N/A |
B2 P008 | Available tools | See individual answer options’ definitions below: •Energy modelling: description of the available tools used to model the energy performance of the studied solutions. •Social models: description of the available tools used to model social processes. •Business and financial models: description of the available tools to test business and financial models. •Sustainable models: description of the available tools used to model sustainable solutions. •Decision making models: description of the available tools to test decision making models. •Fundraising and accessing resources: description of the tools available to raise funds and access resources for the implementation and improvement of the laboratory. •Matching actors: Description of the available tools for matching actors. •Other, please specify | Describe available tools to use the facilities for external people. |
B2 P009 | Monitoring capabilities | See individual answer options’ definitions below: •Execution plan: execution plan for the monitoring process; •Available data: information about the available data: measured, simulated or statistics; •Type of measured data: information about the type of measured data: variables measured, periodicity, storage of data, etc.; •Equipment: information about the equipment used in the laboratory; •Restricted access to facilities: / •Other, please specify | Check all that apply. |
B2 P010 | Any accredited laboratory services? | N/A | Choose one of the following answers. |
B2 P011 | Replication and scalability framework in the PED Lab | Identification of the basic pre-conditions to replicate the necessary procedure in the laboratory deployment. | N/A |
B2 P012 | Stakeholders accessing the facilities | N/A | Choose one of the following answers. |
B2 P013 | Stakeholders’ accessibility framework to facilities | Modality of the external accessibility to the laboratory | Choose one of the following answers. |
ID | Parameter Title | Parameter Definition/Answer Options Definition | Instruction |
---|---|---|---|
C1 P001 | Unlocking Factors | 1—Unimportant; 2—Slightly important; 3—Moderately important; 4—Important; 5—Very important | Please rate from 1 to 5 |
C1 P002 | Driving Factors | 1—Unimportant; 2—Slightly important; 3—Moderately important; 4—Important; 5—Very important | Please rate from 1 to 5 |
C1 P003 | Administrative barriers | 1—Unimportant; 2—Slightly important; 3—Moderately important; 4—Important; 5—Very important | Please rate from 1 to 5 |
C1 P004 | Policy barriers | 1—Unimportant; 2—Slightly important; 3—Moderately important; 4—Important; 5—Very important | Please rate from 1 to 5 |
C1 P005 | Legal and Regulatory barriers | 1—Unimportant; 2—Slightly important; 3—Moderately important; 4—Important; 5—Very important | Please rate from 1 to 5 |
C1 P006 | Technical barriers | 1—Unimportant; 2—Slightly important; 3—Moderately important; 4—Important; 5—Very important | Please rate from 1 to 5 |
C1 P007 | Environmental barriers | 1—Unimportant; 2—Slightly important; 3—Moderately important; 4—Important; 5—Very important | Please rate from 1 to 5 |
C1 P008 | Social and Cultural barriers | 1—Unimportant; 2—Slightly important; 3—Moderately important; 4—Important; 5—Very important | Please rate from 1 to 5 |
C1 P009 | Information and Awareness barriers | 1—Unimportant; 2—Slightly important; 3—Moderately important; 4—Important; 5—Very important | Please rate from 1 to 5 |
C1 P010 | Financial barriers | 1—Unimportant; 2—Slightly important; 3—Moderately important; 4—Important; 5—Very important | Please rate from 1 to 5 |
C1 P011 | Market barriers | 1—Unimportant; 2—Slightly important; 3—Moderately important; 4—Important; 5—Very important | Please rate from 1 to 5 |
C1 P012 | Stakeholders involved | 1—Unimportant; 2—Slightly important; 3—Moderately important; 4—Important; 5—Very important | Please rate from 1 to 5 |
ID | Parameter Title | Parameter Definition/Answer Options Definition | Instruction |
---|---|---|---|
D1 P001 | Name of the project (*) | A project is the overarching structure where one or more case studies implementation processes occur at an international/national level. (e.g., Smart Cities and Communities SCC projects may involve two or more case studies). | N/A |
D1 P002 | Project assigned code | N/A | Reference to official Project Code assigned |
D1 P003 | Start date | N/A | Please specify project starting date (month/year) |
D1 P004 | End date | N/A | Please specify project ending date (month/year) |
D1 P005 | Ongoing project | N/A | Is the project currently ongoing? Choose one of the following answers. |
D1 P006 | Funding programme/financing model | Funding programmes and financial models are intended as tools that support the research, experimentation, and implementation processes in the field of energy transition and urban sustainability | Please, if possible, specify the programme call. |
D1 P007 | Estimated project costs | N/A | Please specify the estimated project cost |
D1 P008 | Description of project objectives/concepts | What are the technical, social, economic, political, and environmental objectives of the project? How is the concept defined to achieve PEDs in this project? | N/A |
D1 P009 | Description of project upscaling strategies | Which methodology is the project/initiative adopting in order to upscale, replicate, and adapt solutions and strategies to different social, geographical, and economic contexts? (i.e., Lighthouse cities and Replicator cities in H2020 projects) | N/A |
D1 P010 | Number of PED case studies in the project | How many PED/PED-relevant case studies (demonstrations, pilots) are in the project? | N/A |
D1 P011 | Case Study | List all case studies within the project. | Choose from the list. |
D1 P012 | Description of project expected impact | What effect took place because of the project/higher level strategic goals. The impact is generated by the project’s results. | List quantitative/qualitative impacts and add all that apply |
D1 P013 | Standardization efforts | Standards can relate to either people or things and serve a wide range of functions. Associated functions are awarding, filtering, ranking, and differentiating. The process of standardisation required the definition of indicators, targets, and thresholds to meet the standard and procedures for measuring, testing, and examining the subject. In addition, standards are commonly revised in order to keep them up to date. | List indicators, targets and thresholds eventually adopted in the project |
D1 P014 | Sources | Any publication, link to website, deliverable referring to project | N/A |
D1 P015 | Contact person within PED project (*) | N/A | N/A |
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PED Booklet [23] | PED DB [12] | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Section * | n. | Parameters | Section ** | n. | Parameters |
GI | 001 | City | A1 | P011 | Geographic coordinates |
A1 | P012 | Country | |||
A1 | P013 | City | |||
A1 | P014 | Climate Zone—Köppen Geiger classification | |||
A1 | P015 | District boundary | |||
GI | 002 | Project name | A1 | P001 | Name of the PED case study/PED Lab |
A1 | P002 | Map, aerial view, photos, graphic details, leaflet | |||
A1 | P003 | Categorisation of the PED site | |||
GI | 003 | Project status | A1 | P005 | Phase of the PED case study/PED Lab |
GI | 004 | Project start—end | A1 | P006 | Start Date |
A1 | P007 | End Date | |||
GI | 005 | Contact | A1 | P026 | Contact person for general enquiries—name |
A1 | P027 | Contact person for general enquiries—organization | |||
A1 | P028 | Contact person for general enquiries—affiliation | |||
A1 | P029 | Contact person for general enquiries—e-mail | |||
A1 | P030 | Contact person for other special topics—name | |||
A1 | P031 | Contact person for other special topics—e-mail | |||
GI | 006 | Project website | A1 | P008 | Reference Project |
D1 | P001 | Name of the project | |||
D1 | P002 | Project assigned code | |||
D1 | P003 | Start date | |||
D1 | P004 | Operator of the installation | |||
D1 | P005 | Ongoing project | |||
D1 | P006 | Funding programme/financing model | |||
D1 | P007 | Estimated project costs | |||
D1 | P008 | Description of project objectives/concepts | |||
D1 | P009 | Description of project upscaling strategies | |||
D1 | P010 | Number of PED case studies in the project | |||
D1 | P011 | Case Study | |||
D1 | P012 | Description of project expected impact | |||
D1 | P013 | Standardization efforts | |||
D1 | P014 | Project Sources | |||
D1 | P015 | Contact person regarding the PED project | |||
A1 | P009 | Data availability | |||
A1 | P010 | Case study/lab sources | |||
GI | 007 | Size of project area | A1 | P018 | Number of buildings in PED |
A1 | P019 | Conditioned space | |||
A1 | P020 | Total ground area | |||
A1 | P021 | Floor area ratio: conditioned space/total ground area | |||
B1 | P007 | District population before intervention—Residential | |||
B1 | P008 | District population after intervention—Residential | |||
B1 | P009 | District population before intervention—Non-residential | |||
B1 | P010 | District population after intervention—Non-residential | |||
B1 | P011 | Population density before intervention | |||
B1 | P012 | Population density after intervention | |||
GI | 008 | Building structure | B1 | P003 | Environment of the case study area |
B1 | P004 | Type of district | |||
B1 | P005 | Case Study Context | |||
B1 | P006 | Year of construction | |||
GI | 009 | Land use (%) | A1 | P016 | Ownership of the case study/PED Lab |
A1 | P017 | Ownership of the land/physical infrastructure | |||
B1 | P013 | Building and Land Use before intervention | |||
B1 | P014 | Building and Land Use after intervention | |||
GI | 010 | Financing | A1 | P022 | Financial schemes |
A1 | P023 | Economic Targets | |||
A1 | P024 | More comment | |||
A1 | P025 | Estimated PED case study/PED LAB costs | |||
OV | 011 | Overview description of the project | B1 | P001 | PED/PED relevant concept definition |
B1 | P002 | Motivation behind PED project development | |||
ST | 012 | Goals/ambition | A1 | P004 | Targets of the PED case study/PED Lab |
ST | 013 | Indicators | A2 | P022 | KPIs related to the PED case study/PED Lab |
ST | 014 | Overall strategies of municipality connected with the project | A3 | P001 | Relevant city/national strategy |
A3 | P002 | Quantitative targets in the city/national strategy | |||
A3 | P003 | Strategies towards decarbonization of the gas grid | |||
A3 | P004 | Identification of needs and priorities | |||
ST | 015 | Which factors have been included in implementation strategies? | A2 | P005 | Mobility included in the energy balance |
A2 | P006 | Description of how mobility is included (or not) | |||
A2 | P026 | Technological Solutions/Innovations—Mobility | |||
A2 | P027 | Mobility strategies—Additional notes | |||
A3 | P005 | Sustainable behaviour | |||
A3 | P006 | Economic strategies | |||
A3 | P008 | Integrated urban strategies | |||
A3 | P009 | Environmental strategies | |||
A3 | P010 | Legal/Regulatory aspects | |||
ST | 016 | Innovative stakeholder involvement strategies | A3 | P007 | Social models |
B2 | P001 | Scale of action of the PED Lab | |||
B2 | P001 | Motivation for developing the PED Lab | |||
B2 | P001 | Lead partner that manages the PED Lab | |||
B2 | P001 | Collaborative partners that participate in the PED Lab | |||
B2 | P001 | Incubation capacities of the PED Lab | |||
B2 | P001 | Available facilities to test configurations in PED Lab | |||
B2 | P001 | Synergies between facilities in the PED Lab | |||
B2 | P001 | Available tools | |||
B2 | P001 | Monitoring capabilities | |||
B2 | P001 | Any accredited laboratory services? | |||
B2 | P001 | Replication and scalability framework in the PED Lab | |||
B2 | P001 | Stakeholders accessing the facilities | |||
B2 | P001 | Stakeholders’ accessibility framework to facilities | |||
ST | 017 | Typology of energy supply | A2 | P001 | Fields of application |
A2 | P002 | Tools/strategies/methods applied | |||
A2 | P003 | Application of ISO52000 [24] | |||
A2 | P004 | Appliances included in the energy balance | |||
A2 | P007 | Annual energy demand in buildings/Thermal | |||
A2 | P008 | Annual energy demand in buildings/Electric | |||
A2 | P009 | Annual energy demand for e-mobility | |||
A2 | P010 | Annual energy demand for infrastructure | |||
A2 | P011 | Annual renewable electricity production on-site/year | |||
A2 | P012 | Annual renewable thermal production on-site/year | |||
A2 | P013 | Renewable resources on-site—Additional notes | |||
A2 | P014 | Annual energy use | |||
A2 | P015 | Annual energy delivered | |||
A2 | P016 | Annual non-renewable electricity production on-site/year | |||
A2 | P017 | Annual non-renewable thermal production on-site/year | |||
A2 | P018 | Annual renewable electricity imports from outside/year | |||
A2 | P019 | Annual renewable thermal imports from outside/year | |||
A2 | P020 | Share of RES on-site/RES outside the boundary | |||
A2 | P021 | GHG-balance calculated for the PED | |||
A2 | P023 | Technological Solutions—Energy Generation | |||
A2 | P024 | Technological Solutions—Energy Flexibility | |||
A2 | P025 | Technological Solutions—Energy Efficiency | |||
A2 | P028 | Energy efficiency certificates | |||
A2 | P029 | Any other building/district certificates | |||
SCB | 018 | Success factors | C1 | P001 | Unlocking Factors |
C1 | P002 | Driving Factors | |||
SCB | 019 | Challenges/Barriers | C1 | P003 | Administrative barriers |
C1 | P004 | Policy barriers | |||
C1 | P005 | Legal and Regulatory barriers | |||
C1 | P006 | Technical barriers | |||
C1 | P007 | Environmental barriers | |||
C1 | P008 | Social and Cultural barriers | |||
C1 | P009 | Information and Awareness barriers | |||
C1 | P010 | Financial barriers | |||
C1 | P011 | Market barriers | |||
C1 | P012 | Stakeholders involved |
Target Stakeholders | Main Emerged Needs |
---|---|
Public Sector (Pu) e.g., government, municipalities, policymakers, public technicians, etc. |
|
Private Sector (Pr) e.g., practitioners (architects, engineers, urban planners, etc.), developers, real estate, construction companies, energy companies, SMEs, etc. |
|
Research Sector (Re) e.g., academia, R&I centres, EU Commission, DGs, etc. |
|
Citizens and civil society (Ct) e.g., inhabitants, local communities, city users, local associations, etc. |
|
ID | Parameter Title | Glossary | Type of Answers | Answers | Target |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Section [A1, A2, A3, B1, B2, C1, D1] + N. of the parameter [e.g., P001, P002, etc.] | Name of the specific parameter. (*) indicates mandatory parameters. | Text description about content of each specific parameter (when needed) - see Annex A | Open [O] insert free text, image or numbers;Close single [Cs] choose one option; Close multiple [Cm] choose one or more options; Automatic [A] generated/calculated from previous inputs. | In case of [O] or [A], specify the type of answer—i.e., free text [txt], image [img], number [nr]. In case of [Cs] or [Cm], list the related answer options | Public sector [Pu] Privates sector [Pr] Research sector [Re] Citizens and civil society [Ct] |
ID | Parameter Title | Type of Answer | Answers | Target | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
O | Cs | Cm | A | Pu | Pr | Re | Ct | |||
A1 P001 | Name of the PED case study/PED Lab (*) | • | [txt] | • | • | • | • | |||
A1 P002 | Map/aerial view/photos/graphic details/leaflet (*) | • | [img] | • | • | • | • | |||
A1 P003 | Categorisation of the PED site (*) | • | •PED case study; •PED relevant case study; •PED Lab. | • | • | • | • | |||
A1 P004 | Targets of the PED case study/PED Lab (*) | • | •Air quality and urban comfort; •Circularity; •Climate neutrality; •Electrification; •Energy Community; •Net-zero emission; •Net zero energy cost; •Annual energy surplus; •Self-sufficiency (energy autonomous); •Maximise self-sufficiency. | • | • | • | • | |||
A1 P005 | Phase of the PED case study/PED Lab (*) | • | •Planning stage; •Implementation stage; •Completed; •In operation. | • | • | • | • | |||
A1 P006 | Start Date | • | [nr] | • | • | |||||
A1 P007 | End Date | • | [nr] | • | • | |||||
A1 P008 | Reference Project | • | [txt] | • | • | • | ||||
A1 P009 | Data availability | • | •Monitoring data available within the districts; •Open data city platform; •Meteorological open data; •General statistical dataset; •GIS open datasets; •Vehicle registration datasets. | • | • | |||||
A1 P010 | Sources | • | [txt] | • | • | • | ||||
A1 P011 | Geographic coordinates (*) | • | [nr] | • | • | • | • | |||
A1 P012 | Country (*) | • | [txt] | • | • | • | • | |||
A1 P013 | City (*) | • | [txt] | • | • | • | • | |||
A1 P014 | Climate Zone—Köppen Geiger classification (*) | • | •Af; •Am; •As; •Aw; •BSh; •BSk; •BWh; •BWk; •Cfa; •Csa; •Csb; •Csc; •Cwa; •Cwb; •Cwc; •Dfa; •Dfb; •Dfc; •Dfd; •Dsa; •Dsb; •Dsc; •Dwa; •Dwb; •Dwc; •Dwd; •EF; •ET | • | • | • | • | |||
A1 P015 | District boundary | • | •Functional; •Geographic; •Off-Grid; •Virtual; •Other—specify | • | • | |||||
A1 P016 | Ownership of the case study/PED Lab (*) | • | •Private; • Public; •Mixed | • | • | • | • | |||
A1 P017 | Ownership of the land/physical infrastructure (*) | • | •Single Owners; •Multiple Owners | • | • | • | • | |||
A1 P018 | Number of buildings in PED | • | [nr] | • | • | |||||
A1 P019 | Conditioned space | • | [nr] | • | • | |||||
A1 P020 | Total ground area | • | [nr] | • | • | |||||
A1 P021 | Floor area ratio: conditioned space/total ground area | • | [nr] | • | • | |||||
A1 P022 | Financial schemes (*) | • | •Private, Real estate; •Private, ESCO scheme; •Private, Other, please specify; •Public, EU structural funding; •Public, National funding; •Public, Regional funding; •Public, Municipal funding; •Public, Other, please specify; •Research funding, EU; •Research funding, National; •Research funding, Local/regional; •Research funding, Other, please specify. Add the value in EUR, if available | • | • | • | • | |||
A1 P023 | Economic Targets | • | •Job creation; Positive externalities; •Boosting local businesses; •Boosting local and sustainable production; •Boosting consumption of local and sustainable products; •Other, please specify. | • | • | |||||
A1 P024 | More comment | • | [txt] | • | • | • | • | |||
A1 P025 | Estimated PED case study/PED LAB costs | • | [nr] | • | • | • | • | |||
A1 P026 | Contact person for general enquiries—name (*) | • | [txt] | • | • | • | • | |||
A1 P027 | Contact person for general enquiries—organization (*) | • | [txt] | • | • | • | • | |||
A1 P028 | Contact person for general enquiries—affiliation (*) | • | •Research Centre/University; •Municipality/Public Bodies; •SME/Industry; •Other, please specify | • | • | • | • | |||
A1 P029 | Contact person for general enquiries—e-mail (*) | • | [txt] | • | • | • | • | |||
A1 P030 | Contact person for other special topics—name | • | [txt] | • | • | • | • | |||
A1 P031 | Contact person for other special topics—e-mail | • | [txt] | • | • | • | • |
ID | Parameter Title | Type of Answer | Answers | Target | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
O | Cs | Cm | A | Pu | Pr | Re | Ct | |||
A2 P001 | Fields of application | • | •Energy efficiency; •Energy flexibility; •Energy production; •E-mobility; •Urban management; •Urban comfort and air quality; •Digital technologies; •Water use; •Waste management; •Air quality; •Construction materials; •Other, please specify | • | • | |||||
A2 P002 | Tools/strategies/methods applied | • | [txt] | • | • | |||||
A2 P003 | Application of ISO52000 | • | •Yes; •No | • | • | |||||
A2 P004 | Appliances included in the calculation of the energy balance | • | •Yes; •No | • | • | • | ||||
A2 P005 | Mobility included in the calculation of the energy balance | • | •Yes; •No | • | • | |||||
A2 P006 | Description of how mobility is included (or not included) in the calculation | • | [txt] | • | • | |||||
A2 P007 | Annual energy demand in buildings/Thermal demand | • | [nr] | • | • | |||||
A2 P008 | Annual energy demand in buildings/Electric demand | • | [nr] | • | • | |||||
A2 P009 | Annual energy demand for e-mobility | • | [nr] | • | • | |||||
A2 P010 | Annual energy demand for infrastructure | • | [nr] | • | • | |||||
A2 P011 | Annual renewable electricity production on-site during target year | • | •PV; •Wind; •Hydro; •Biomass_el; •Biomass_peat_el; •PVT_el; •Other, please specify. Add the value in GWh/y, if available- | • | • | • | ||||
A2 P012 | Annual renewable thermal production on-site during target year | • | •Geothermal; •Solar Thermal; •Biomass_heat; •Waste heat+HP; •Biomass_peat_heat; •PVT_th, •Biomass_firewood_th, •Other, please specify. Add the value in GWh/y, if available | • | • | • | ||||
A2 P013 | Renewable resources on-site—Additional notes | • | [txt] | • | • | • | ||||
A2 P014 | Annual energy use | • | [nr] | • | • | |||||
A2 P015 | Annual energy delivered | • | [nr] | • | • | |||||
A2 P016 | Annual non-renewable electricity production on-site during target year | • | [nr] | • | • | |||||
A2 P017 | Annual non-renewable thermal production on-site during target year | • | •Gas; •Coal; •Oil; •Other, please specify.Add the value in GWh/y, if available. | • | • | |||||
A2 P018 | Annual renewable electricity imports from outside the boundary during target year | • | •PV; •Wind; •Hydro; •Biomass_el; •Biomass_peat_el; •PVT_el; •Other, please specify. Add the value in GWh/y, if available. | • | • | |||||
A2 P019 | Annual renewable thermal imports from outside the boundary during target year | • | •Geothermal; •Solar Thermal; •Biomass_heat; •Waste heat+HP; •Biomass_peat_heat; •PVT_th; •Biomass_firewood_th; •Other, please specify. Add the value in GWh/y, if available. | • | • | |||||
A2 P020 | Share of RES on-site/RES outside the boundary | • | [nr] | • | • | |||||
A2 P021 | GHG-balance calculated for the PED | • | [nr] | • | • | |||||
A2 P022 | KPIs related to the PED case study/PED Lab | • | •Safety and Security; •Health; •Education; •Mobility; •Energy; •Water; •Waste; •Economic development; •Housing and community. Specify the associated KPIs | • | • | |||||
A2 P023 | Technological Solutions/Innovations—Energy Generation | • | •Photovoltaics; •Wind turbines; •Solar thermal collectors; •Geothermal energy system; •Waste heat recovery; •Waste to energy; •Polygeneration; •Co-generation; •Heat Pump; •Hydrogen; •Hydropower plant; •Biomass; •Biogas; •Other, please specify | • | • | • | • | |||
A2 P024 | Technological Solutions/Innovations—Energy Flexibility | • | •Information and Communication; •Technologies (ICT); •Energy management system; •Demand-side management; •Smart electricity grid; •Thermal Storage; •Electric Storage; •District Heating and Cooling; •Smart metering and demand-responsive control systems; •P2P—buildings; •Other, please specify | • | • | • | • | |||
A2 P025 | Technological Solutions/Innovations—Energy Efficiency | • | •Deep Retrofitting; •Energy efficiency measures in historic buildings; •High-performance new buildings; •Smart Public infrastructure (e.g., smart lighting); •Urban data platforms; •Mobile applications for citizens; •Building services (HVAC and Lighting); •Smart irrigation; •Digital tracking for waste disposal; •Smart surveillance; •Other, please specify | • | • | • | • | |||
A2 P026 | Technological Solutions/Innovations—Mobility | • | •Efficiency of vehicles (public and/or private); •Measures to reduce traffic; •e-Mobility; •Soft mobility infrastructures and last mile solutions; •Car-free area; •Other, please specify | • | • | • | • | |||
A2 P027 | Mobility strategies—Additional notes | • | [txt] | • | • | |||||
A2 P028 | Energy efficiency certificates | • | •Yes; •No | • | • | |||||
A2 P029 | Any other building/district certificates | • | •Yes; •No | • | • |
ID | Parameter Title | Type of Answer | Answers | Target | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
O | Cs | Cm | A | Pu | Pr | Re | Ct | |||
A3 P001 | Relevant city/national strategy | • | •Smart cities strategies; •Urban Renewal Strategies; •Energy master planning (SECAP, etc.); •New development strategies; •Promotion of energy communities; •Climate change adaptation plan/strategy; •National/international city networks addressing sustainable urban development and climate neutrality | • | • | |||||
A3 P002 | Quantitative targets included in the city/national strategy | • | [txt] | • | • | |||||
A3 P003 | Strategies towards decarbonization of the gas grid | • | •Electrification of Heating System based on Heat Pumps; •Electrification of Cooking Methods; •Biogas; •Hydrogen; •Other, please specify | • | • | |||||
A3 P004 | Identification of needs and priorities | • | [txt] | • | • | |||||
A3 P005 | Sustainable behaviour | • | [txt] | • | • | |||||
A3 P006 | Economic strategies | • | •Open data business models; •Innovative business models; •Life Cycle Cost; •Circular economy models; •Blockchain; •Demand management; •Living Lab; •Local trading; •Existing incentives; •Other, please specify | • | • | • | • | |||
A3 P007 | Social models | • | •Strategies towards (local) community-building; •Co-creation/Citizen engagement strategies; •Behavioural Change/End-users engagement; •Citizen Social Research; •Policy Forums; •Social incentives; •Quality of Life; •Strategies towards social mix; •Affordability; •Prevention of energy poverty; •Digital Inclusion; •Citizen/owner; •Involvement in planning and maintenance; •Educational activities and trainings; •Other, please specify | • | • | • | ||||
A3 P008 | Integrated urban strategies | • | •Strategic urban planning; •Digital twinning and visual 3D models; •District Energy plans; •City Vision 2050; •SECAP Updates; •Building/district Certification; •Other, please specify | • | • | |||||
A3 P009 | Environmental strategies | • | •Energy Neutral; •Low Emission Zone; •Net zero carbon footprint; •Carbon-free; •Life Cycle approach; •Pollutants reduction; •Greening strategies; •Sustainable Urban drainage systems (SUDS); •Cool Materials; •Nature Based Solutions (NBS); •Other, please specify | • | • | |||||
A3 P010 | Legal/Regulatory aspects | • | [txt] | • | • | • |
ID | Parameter Title | Type of Answer | Answer Options | Target | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
O | Cs | Cm | A | Pu | Pr | Re | Ct | |||
B1 P001 | PED/PED relevant concept definition | • | [txt] | • | • | • | ||||
B1 P002 | Motivation behind PED/PED relevant project development | • | [txt] | • | • | |||||
B1 P003 | Environment of the case study area | • | •Rural; •Rurban; •Suburban area; •Urban area | • | • | • | • | |||
B1 P004 | Type of district | • | •New construction; •Renovation | • | • | • | • | |||
B1 P005 | Case Study Context | • | •Re-use Transformation Area; •New Development; •Retrofitting Area; •Preservation Area | • | • | • | • | |||
B1 P006 | Year of construction | • | [nr] | • | • | |||||
B1 P007 | District population before intervention—Residential | • | [nr] | • | ||||||
B1 P008 | District population after intervention—Residential | • | [nr] | • | ||||||
B1 P009 | District population before intervention—Non-residential | • | [nr] | • | ||||||
B1 P010 | District population after intervention—Non-residential | • | [nr] | • | ||||||
B1 P011 | Population density before intervention | • | [nr] | • | ||||||
B1 P012 | Population density after intervention | • | [nr] | • | ||||||
B1 P013 | Building and Land Use before intervention | • | •Residential; •Office; •Industry and utility; •Commercial; •Institutional; •Natural areas; •Recreational; •Dismissed areas; •Other, please specify. Add the value in m2, if available. | • | • | • | • | |||
B1 P014 | Building and Land Use after intervention | • | •Residential; •Office; •Industry and Utility; •Commercial; •Institutional; •Natural areas; •Recreational; •Dismissed areas; •Other, please specify. Add the value in m2, if available. | • | • | • | • |
ID | Parameter Title | Type of Answer | Answer Options | Target | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
O | Cs | Cm | A | Pu | Pr | Re | Ct | |||
B2 P001 | Scale of action | • | •Building; •City; •District; •Campus; •Virtual; •Semi-virtual | • | • | • | • | |||
B2 P002 | Motivation for developing the PED Lab | • | •Strategic; •Private; •Civic; •Grassroots; •Other, please specify | • | • | • | ||||
B2 P003 | Lead partner that manages the PED Lab | • | •Research centre/University; •Municipality; •Industry/Company; •Other, please specify | • | • | • | ||||
B2 P004 | Collaborative partners that participate in the PED Lab | • | •Academia; •Private; •Industrial; •Citizens, •Public, •NGO; •Other, please specify | • | • | • | ||||
B2 P005 | Incubation capacities of the PED Lab | • | •Monitoring and evaluation infrastructure; •Pivoting and risk-mitigating measures; •Tools for prototyping and modelling; •Tools, spaces, events for testing and validation; •Other, please specify | • | • | • | • | |||
B2 P006 | Available facilities to test urban configurations in PED Lab | • | •Buildings; •Demand-side management; •Prosumers/P2P; •Renewable generation; •Non-renewable generation; •Energy storage; •Energy networks; •Efficiency measures; •Waste management; •Water treatment; •Lighting; •E-mobility; •Green areas; •User interaction/participation; •Information and Communication Technologies (ICT); •Ambient measures; •Social interactions; •Sustainability processes; •Blockchain; •Business models; •Financial models; •Circular economy models; •Other, please specify | • | • | • | • | |||
B2 P007 | Synergies between facilities in the PED Lab | • | [txt] | • | • | |||||
B2 P008 | Available tools | • | •Energy modelling; •Social models; •Business and financial models; •Sustainable models; •Decision making models; •Fundraising and accessing resources; •Matching actors; •Other, please specify; | • | • | • | • | |||
B2 P009 | Monitoring capabilities | • | •Execution plan; •Available data; •Type of measured data; •Equipment; •Restricted access to facilities; •Other, please specify | • | • | • | ||||
B2 P010 | Any accredited laboratory services? | • | •Yes; •No | • | • | • | ||||
B2 P011 | Replication and scalability framework in the PED Lab | • | [txt] | • | • | • | ||||
B2 P012 | Stakeholders accessing the facilities | • | •Academy and students; •Industry; •Research; •Associations; • Other, please specify | • | • | • | • | |||
B2 P013 | Stakeholders’ accessibility framework to facilities | • | •Under contract; •Collaborative project; •Internships allowed; •Other (open text) | • | • | • | • |
ID | Parameter Title | Type of Answer | Answer Options | Target | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
O | Cs | Cm | A | Pu | Pr | Re | Ct | |||
C1 P001 | Unlocking Factors | • | •Recent technological improvements for on-site RES production; •Innovative, integrated, prefabricated packages for buildings envelope/Energy efficiency of building stock; •Energy Communities, P2P, Prosumers concepts; •Storage systems and E-mobility market penetration; •Decreasing costs of innovative materials; •Financial mechanisms to reduce costs and maximize benefits; •The ability to predict Multiple Benefits; •The ability to predict the distribution of benefits and impacts; •Citizens improved awareness and engagement on sustainable energy issues (bottom-up); •Social acceptance (top-down); •Improved local and national policy frameworks (i.e., incentives, laws, etc.); •Presence of integrated urban strategies and plans; •Multidisciplinary approaches available for systemic integration; •Availability of grants (from EC or other donors) to finance the PED Lab projects; •Availability of RES on site (Local RES); •Ongoing or established collaboration on Public Private Partnership among key stakeholders; •Any other UNLOCKING FACTORS—please specify—rank on the scale (1–5) | • | ||||||
C1 P002 | Driving Factors | • | •Climate Change mitigation need •Climate Change mitigation need (local RES production and efficiency); •Climate Change adaptation need; •Rapid urbanization trend and need of urban expansions; •Urban re-development of existing built environment; •Economic growth need; •Territorial and market attractiveness; •Improved local environmental quality (air, noise, aesthetics, etc.); Energy autonomy/independence; • Any other DRIVING FACTOR—please specify—rank on the scale (1–5) | • | ||||||
C1 P003 | Administrative barriers | • | •Difficulty in the coordination of high number of partners and authorities; •Lack of good cooperation and acceptance among partners; •Lack of public participation; •Lack of institutions/mechanisms to disseminate information; •Long and complex procedures for authorization of project activities; •Time consuming requirements by EC or other donors concerning reporting and accountancy; •Complicated and non-comprehensive public procurement; •Fragmented and or complex ownership structure; •City administration and cross-sectoral attitude/approaches (silos); •Lack of internal capacities to support energy transition; •Any other Administrative BARRIER—please specify—rank on the scale (1–5) | • | ||||||
C1 P004 | Policy barriers | • | •Lack of long-term and consistent energy plans and policies; •Lacking or fragmented local political commitment and support on the long term; •Lack of Cooperation and support between national-regional-local entities; •Any other Political BARRIER—please specify—rank on the scale (1–5) | • | ||||||
C1 P005 | Legal and Regulatory barriers | • | •Inadequate regulations for new technologies; •Regulatory instability; •Non-effective regulations; •Unfavourable local regulations for innovative technologies; •Building code and land-use planning hindering innovative technologies; •Insufficient or insecure financial incentives; •Unresolved privacy concerns and limiting nature of privacy protection regulation; •Shortage of proven and tested solutions and examples; •Any other Legal and Regulatory BARRIER—please specify—rank on the scale (1–5) | • | • | |||||
C1 P006 | Technical barriers | • | •Lack of skilled and trained personnel; •Deficient planning; •Lack of well-defined process; •Retrofitting work in dwellings in occupied state; •Inaccuracy in energy modelling and simulation; •Lack/cost of computational scalability; •Grid congestion, grid instability; •Negative effects of project intervention on the natural environment; •Energy retrofitting work in dense and/or historical urban environment; •Difficult definition of system boundaries; •Any other Technical BARRIER—please specify—rank on the scale (1–5) | • | • | • | ||||
C1 P007 | Environmental barriers | • | •Yes + [txt]; •No | • | • | |||||
C1 P008 | Social and Cultural barriers | • | •Inertia; •Lack of values and interest in energy optimization measurements; •Low acceptance of new projects and technologies; •Difficulty of finding and engaging relevant actors; •Lack of trust beyond social network; •Rebound effect; •Hostile or passive attitude towards environmentalism; •Hostile or passive attitude towards energy collaboration; •Exclusion of socially disadvantaged groups; •Non-energy issues are more important and urgent for actors; •Any other Social BARRIER—please specify—rank on the scale (1–5) | • | • | • | ||||
C1 P009 | Information and Awareness barriers | • | •Insufficient information on the part of potential users and consumers; •Lack of awareness among authorities; •Perception of interventions as complicated and expensive, with negative socio-economic or environmental impacts; •Information asymmetry causing power asymmetry of established actors; •High costs of design, material, construction, and installation; •Any other Information and Awareness BARRIER—please specify—rank on the scale (1–5) | • | • | |||||
C1 P010 | Financial barriers | • | •Hidden costs; •Insufficient external financial support and funding for project activities; •Limited access to capital and cost disincentives; •Economic crisis; •Risk and uncertainty; •Lack of consolidated and tested business models; •Any other Financial BARRIER—please specify—rank on the scale (1–5) | • | • | • | ||||
C1 P011 | Market barriers | • | •Split incentives; •Energy price distortion; •Energy market concentration, gatekeeper actors (DSOs); •Any other Market BARRIER—please specify—rank on the scale (1–5) | • | • | • | ||||
C1 P012 | Stakeholders involved | • | •Government/Public Authorities; •Research and Innovation; •Financial/Funding; •Analyst, ICT and Big Data; •Business process management; •Urban Services providers; •Real Estate developers; •Design/Construction companies; •End-users/Occupants/Energy Citizens; •Social/Civil Society/NGOs; •Industry/SME/eCommerce; •Other—please specify—Choose options (1–5) | • | • | • | • |
ID | Parameter Title | Type of Answer | Answer Options | Target | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
O | Cs | Cm | A | Pu | Pr | Re | Ct | |||
D1 P001 | Name of the project (*) | • | [txt] | • | • | • | • | |||
D1 P002 | Project assigned code | • | [nr] | • | ||||||
D1 P003 | Start date | • | [nr] | • | • | |||||
D1 P004 | End date | • | [nr] | • | • | |||||
D1 P005 | Ongoing project | • | •Yes; •No | • | • | • | ||||
D1 P006 | Funding programme/financing model | • | •FP7/H2020/HEU; •Interreg; •National funding; •Public-Private Partnership; •Other, please specify. Specify the call, If available. | • | • | • | ||||
D1 P007 | Estimated project costs | • | [nr] | • | • | • | ||||
D1 P008 | Description of project objectives/concepts | • | [txt] | • | • | • | ||||
D1 P009 | Description of project upscaling strategies | • | [txt] | • | • | |||||
D1 P010 | Number of PED case studies in the project | • | [nr] | • | ||||||
D1 P011 | Case Study | • | [txt] | • | • | • | • | |||
D1 P012 | Description of project expected impact | • | [txt] | • | • | |||||
D1 P013 | Standardisation efforts | • | [txt] | • | ||||||
D1 P014 | Sources | • | [txt] | • | • | • | • | |||
D1 P015 | Contact person within PED project (*) | • | [txt] | • | • | • | • |
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© 2024 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
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Civiero, P.; Turci, G.; Alpagut, B.; Kuzmic, M.; Soutullo, S.; Sánchez, M.N.; Seco, O.; Bossi, S.; Haase, M.; Massa, G.; et al. Operational Insights and Future Potential of the Database for Positive Energy Districts. Energies 2024, 17, 899. https://doi.org/10.3390/en17040899
Civiero P, Turci G, Alpagut B, Kuzmic M, Soutullo S, Sánchez MN, Seco O, Bossi S, Haase M, Massa G, et al. Operational Insights and Future Potential of the Database for Positive Energy Districts. Energies. 2024; 17(4):899. https://doi.org/10.3390/en17040899
Chicago/Turabian StyleCiviero, Paolo, Giulia Turci, Beril Alpagut, Michal Kuzmic, Silvia Soutullo, María Nuria Sánchez, Oscar Seco, Silvia Bossi, Matthias Haase, Gilda Massa, and et al. 2024. "Operational Insights and Future Potential of the Database for Positive Energy Districts" Energies 17, no. 4: 899. https://doi.org/10.3390/en17040899
APA StyleCiviero, P., Turci, G., Alpagut, B., Kuzmic, M., Soutullo, S., Sánchez, M. N., Seco, O., Bossi, S., Haase, M., Massa, G., & Gollner, C. (2024). Operational Insights and Future Potential of the Database for Positive Energy Districts. Energies, 17(4), 899. https://doi.org/10.3390/en17040899