1. Energy performance of Scottish public buildings and its impact on the ability to use low-temperature heat.
- Author
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Reguis, Antoine, Tunzi, Michele, Vand, Behrang, Tuohy, Paul, and Currie, John
- Subjects
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HEATING from central stations , *PUBLIC buildings , *BUILDING repair , *HEATING , *BUILDING envelopes , *ARTIFICIAL respiration , *BAND gaps - Abstract
• A well-functioning space heating system can operate below 70 °C for 98% of the year and below 55 °C for 71% of the year. • The performance gap between measured and calculated energy use is widening across building age groups, with a clear increase for post-1980 buildings. • Pre-1980 buildings can operate with supply temperatures below 70 °C for 96–99% of the year and below 55 °C for 67–71% of the year. • Building envelope improvement, whilst recommended, is not a pre-requisite for using low-temperature supply in pre-1980 buildings. • Post-1980 buildings could have limitations in respect of using low-temperature heat under windy conditions. Decarbonising heat in the UK by 2050 will require the wider adoption of low-temperature heat. Current systems, largely relying on gas boilers, have design operating temperatures of 82/71 °C (supply/return) while new standards for 4th Generation District Heating are 55/25 °C. Local authorities must set-up strategies to get their buildings "Heat network ready" but this raises the question of the ability for existing buildings to use low-temperature heat. The aim and the novelty of this paper is to establish a relationship between an energy 'performance gap' in Scottish public buildings and their ability to use low-temperature heat. This performance gap has been evaluated for 121 non-domestic buildings, primarily schools, operated by The City of Edinburgh Council. Space heating system are assumed oversized by 10%. The results show that renovation of the building envelope, while highly desirable, is not a pre-requisite for using low-temperature heat in pre-1980 constructed buildings, which represent 64% of the stock. It also highlights that post-1980 buildings, predominantly utilising mechanical ventilation systems, demonstrate an increasing performance gap which could limit their ability to use reduced operating temperature, especially in windy conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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