Application of the InTIME Methodology for the Transition of Office Buildings to Low Carbon—A Case Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Energy Management Background
1.2. Energy Transition Engineering
2. Methodology: Transition Engineering Analysis
3. Wicked Problem Definition: Description of the Heating System and Energy Use Considerations
4. Application of the InTIME Methodology to the Case Study
5. Emerging Concept: THE-AID Program
5.1. Energy Audit
5.2. Evaluation of Heating Behaviour
5.3. Intervention Design
6. Discussion
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
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Technology Alternative | Initial Investment | Cost Burden in Time | Supply Chain Risks | Future Environmental Commitment | Estimated Implementation Time |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Biomass (wood chip/pellet boiler) | New boiler + tech conversion + fuel storage and handling space | Fuel storage Lessened revenues from UC forestry lease Increasing carbon cost | Finite resources A limited number of suppliers. | Reforestation and implications of plantation forestry | 2 years + |
Electric heaters/heat pumps | New equipment + transformer upgrade | Costly operation and maintenance | Blackout/Brownout | Peak management (fossil fuels required) | 3 years + |
Ground source heat pumps | New infrastructure | Maintenance of equipment and bores | Limited resource access | Artesian wells at risk of over-extraction | N/A to supply all buildings |
Scenario | BAU − Coal | WCPB | ASHP | BER + Coal |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary Energy Input (MWh/year) | 30,000 (−0%) | 30,000 (−0%) | 8000 (−73%) | 17,100 (−43%) |
Fuel Mass (T/year) | 6000 | 8500 | n/a | 3420 |
Operational Carbon Emissions [53] (TCO2/year) | 12,300 (−0%) | 140 (−98%) | 400 (−96%) | 7000 (−43%) |
Peak Heat Power (MW) | 15.5 (−0%) | 15.5 (−0%) | 11.2 (−28%) | 12.4 (−20%) |
Air Pollution | Unchanged | Unchanged | None | Reduced |
CAPEX (MNZ$) | 0 | 15 | 11 | 51 |
Fuel OPEX (MNZ$/yr) | 1.9 | 1.3–2.2 | 1.6 | 1.1 |
Scenario | Adaptive Capacity + Coal | Sustainable Transition |
---|---|---|
Primary Energy Input (MWh/year) | 6000 (−80%) | 6000 (−80%) |
Fuel Mass (T/year) | 1200 | 1700 |
Operational Carbon Emissions (TCO2/year) | 2500 (−80%) | 30 (−99%) |
Peak Heat Power (MW) | 4 (−75%) | 4 (−75%) |
Air Pollution | Significantly reduced | Significantly reduced |
CAPEX (MNZ$) | 0 | >4 |
Fuel OPEX (MNZ$/yr) | 0.4 | 0.3–0.5 |
Type of Behavioural Intervention | Sub-Class | User Attribute |
---|---|---|
Information | Targeted information campaigns | Low PBC/FC |
Educational programs/training | Low habitual adaptive behaviour | |
Type of Physical Intervention | Sub-Class | Office Characteristics/User Attribute |
Office modifications | Reallocation to a different thermal zone in the building | Low thermal performance (office) Physiological deficiencies |
Furniture rearrangement | Low thermal performance (office) Low habitual adaptive behaviour | |
Access to heating controls | Low PBC/FC | |
New heating equipment | Physiological deficiencies |
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Andrade, I.; Land, J.; Gallardo, P.; Krumdieck, S. Application of the InTIME Methodology for the Transition of Office Buildings to Low Carbon—A Case Study. Sustainability 2022, 14, 12053. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141912053
Andrade I, Land J, Gallardo P, Krumdieck S. Application of the InTIME Methodology for the Transition of Office Buildings to Low Carbon—A Case Study. Sustainability. 2022; 14(19):12053. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141912053
Chicago/Turabian StyleAndrade, Isabel, Johann Land, Patricio Gallardo, and Susan Krumdieck. 2022. "Application of the InTIME Methodology for the Transition of Office Buildings to Low Carbon—A Case Study" Sustainability 14, no. 19: 12053. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141912053
APA StyleAndrade, I., Land, J., Gallardo, P., & Krumdieck, S. (2022). Application of the InTIME Methodology for the Transition of Office Buildings to Low Carbon—A Case Study. Sustainability, 14(19), 12053. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141912053