Title: Passivhaus in the UK
1 Passivhaus in the UK - are we making
progress? Liz Reason, Director, CarbonLite
CarbonLite
2The UK government has ambitious ambitions
- Targets for new buildings
- zero carbon homes by 2016
- zero carbon non-domestic buildings by 2020
- the Eco-Town Challenge
- reducing CO2 emissions by 80 across
developments as a whole - making it possible for residents to live within
a 2 tonne CO2 budget
DECC Department of Energy and Climate Change
Government is consulting on a strategy to reduce
CO2 from existing buildings by 80
Zero carbon schools
Zero carbon colleges
A 60 cut in carbon footprint
11/20/2009
2
3And has devised the Code for Sustainable Homes
for starters
4The first officially PH certified UK building -
training centre/ offices, Machynlleth
5Private house, Stroud
6Social housing, Ford Farm, Plymouth
7Denby Dale, West Yorkshire
8Disability Essex, Rochford
9Lound Hall, 38 room nursing home, Suffolk
10Refurbishment of a community centre, London
11Gentoo Housing Association - Racecourse Estate
Houghton-Le-Spring, Tyne and Wear
25 homes
12Victorian Cottage, Hereford
13We need a clear pathway to the destination of low
energy buildings
- Know where youre going
- Understand energy in buildings
- Adopt the best components, tools and techniques
- Measure how well you did
- Close the feedback loop
These are the principles adopted by CarbonLite
14Three standards underpin CarbonLite
They provide clear CO2 and energy targets
These are domestic sector figures based on a 80m2
semi-detached house
The standards are all based on the Passivhaus
standard and associated software
15Why model CarbonLite standards on Passivhaus and
PHPP?
- The standard
- A carefully developed low energy building
standard - Promotes design of cost-effective energy
efficiency solutions - Focuses on getting the fabric right
- Performance-monitored
- Gaining credibility throughout Europe and beyond
- PHPP (PassivHaus Planning Package)
- Two specific energy targets
- space heating 15 kWh/m2.yr
- primary energy 120 kWh/m2.yr
- Models buildings as a system and encourages low
energy solutions throughout - Optimises passive solar gain
- Promotes and assists designers to achieve low
energy solutions - Provides reasonable predictions of energy use for
meeting CarbonLite standards
But it was not possible accurately to model in
SAP a super-insulated dwelling with passive solar
gain
16In the first instance, the UK regime differs in
key respects from the Passivhaus standard
- The UK
- A CO2 target
- prompts carbon-saving solutions which tend to be
expensive kit - Expressed as a target reduction against a
notional building whose parameters are not fixed - It is possible to achieve compliance by worsening
the base case - Focuses on the fabric standard but is ambivalent
towards non-fabric energy - Compromises the fabric standard
- Passivhaus
- Two energy targets
- space heating
- primary energy
- Specific energy targets
- 15 kWh/m2.yr space heating
- 120 kWh/m2.yr primary energy
- Focuses on fabric standard and applies and
accounts for low energy design at the whole
building
17The comparison of SAP and PHPP
- The key findings
- When modeling well-insulated low energy
dwellings, we found - PHPP tended to predict higher heating
requirements than SAP - SAP predicted no heating at all (where in
practice some heating is needed) - Because there are no fixed energy limits,
inefficient built forms are favoured rather than
penalised - SAP indicates that carbon savings can only be
delivered by expensive kit before using useful
energy efficiency measures
- Our approach
- We set up a PHPP model of a standard UK developer
3 bed semi-detached house, altered to meet the PH
standard - We then set up a SAP model of the same house and
found differences - Where assumptions in the two models differed, we
introduced the SAP assumptions into PHPP
So whats going on?
18 We explored six possible differences
kWh/m2.yr
NB These differences are cumulative
These differences are not exhaustive - more
analysis could be undertaken
19 And heres what we found
20Energy balance - the big difference is in the
gains .
No heating needed
And heres why
21 but not the only one
- Ventilation losses overestimated
- Fabric losses underestimated
Solar gains underestimated
22PHPP looks daunting but accounts in detail for
energy use
- PHPP
- uses frames and glazing of individual windows,
accurately measures shading, calculates window
installation thermal bridges - assumes low gains from hot water, lighting,
appliances and occupants - A appliances and 100 low energy lighting are
required - hot water systems required cylinder insulation,
insulated primary pipe lengths, and dead leg
volumes - these are used to accurately estimate the actual
hot water energy consumption - MVHR test procedures produce a conservative power
consumption figure, by testing at 100 Pa external
and around 75 maximum flow rate of the unit - calculates the heat absorbed by cold water lying
in pipes and toilet pans
- SAP
- uses homogeneous window characteristics
- assumes business as usual on household energy
efficiency, and continues to expect tungsten
lighting to be used - does not reward design of efficient hot water
systems - MVHR Appendix Q test procedures do not replicate
the design of real systems
With a 15kWh/m2.yr space heating limit, every kWh
counts
23We need to change UK culture
- Weve
- been too relaxed about energy in buildings
- muddled our metrics
- oversimplified SAP to make it accessible to a
broad range of users - used fudges without understanding the
implications and incentives they create - undervalued energy expertise and divorced it from
design - failed to exploit the energy expertise we do have
So what do we need to do?
24Set up a new organisation
- To focus on the Passivhaus standard and
methodologies - To provide leadership
- To build capacity in people and products
- To expand the market
WATCH THIS SPACE
25CarbonLite www.carbonlite.net