VC-21A-C005 — Application of Grey-Box Models for the Quantification of the Energy Flexibility of a School Building in Canada

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Building electrification, or the replacement of fossil fuel heating with electric technologies, is increasingly seen as a key solution to help reduce emissionsgreenhouse gas emissions when combined with a steady shift toward low-carbon electric generation. Although a handful of studies have quantified the costsand benefits of electrifying the residential sector, relatively few studies have been conducted on the commercial building sector. This paper attempts toanswer initial questions about the electrification of existing commercial buildings, primarily by quantifying energy, emissions, and economic impacts, butalso in identifying barriers and strategies for commercial building electrification. Results show buildings with medium-to-high occupancy in warmer U.S.regions to be the most economically favorable for commercial building electrification. Of the buildings studied, this analysis found that commercial buildingelectrification could reduce energy consumption by 37% and emissions by 44%. However, the study found that simple payback periods are often long forinstalling heat pumps at the time existing systems need replacement and therefore commercial building electrification will likely proceed slowly withoutadditional policy support.

Citation: 2021 Virtual Conference Papers

Product Details

Published:
2021
Number of Pages:
9
Units of Measure:
Dual
File Size:
1 file , 3 MB
Product Code(s):
D-VC-21A-C005
Note:
This product is unavailable in Belarus, Russia