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Report: OPET Building - the European network for the promotion of energy technologies in the building sector

Website: www.opet-building.net

Presented at: European Conference on Local Energy Action: Optimising local action to drive sustainable energy and transport in the Europe of Twenty-Five
20-21 October 2004, Brussels, Belgium

Ingrid Bauer, BIT - the Bureau for International Research and Technology Cooperation, Austria

Slides (525 KB PDF) | Proceedings and Recordings

Background

Buildings fulfil multiple purposes. They provide shelter and aim to create adequate working and living conditions for their inhabitants. Apart from these functional aspects, buildings serve as a means of cultural identification and social representation. To satisfy all these diverse expectations, financial, material and energy resources are required to construct and maintain a building.

Despite the diversity of individual life styles in the EU member states and in accession countries, about 41% of the total final energy use in these countries is used to heat, cool and light buildings. Corresponding to the decisive share in final energy consumption the building sector is also a main source for greenhouse gas emissions. Furthermore, the cost related to energy use in building must not be neglected: In 1996, the accompanying costs in the domestic and tertiary sector corresponded to roughly 4% of the GDP of the EU.

Objectives

This background given, the OPET BUILDING Network pursues the following overall goals:

  1. Promoting of efficient and innovative building-related energy technologies in the major segment of the building sector, which is the residential building sector as well as the service building sector (tertiary buildings), both for new construction and building refurbishment;
  2. Supporting of market penetration of innovative instruments and tools, which can be applied by building owners, facility managers and/or engineers and planners, and which foster the application of efficient building-related energy technologies;
  3. Ensuring a smooth and quick application of the European regulation concerning the energy performance of buildings;
  4. Paying special attention to innovative technologies and design concepts that have passed the primary stage of demonstration, pilot and laboratory plants and that are just on the edge to commercialisation with a promising market perspective.
  5. Increasing the level of information and know-how transfer throughout Europe by linking leading expert organisations in a network and by implementing joint activities;
  6. Contributing to the creation of a European research area by strengthening the co-operation between with research centres, universities and industries, that deal with the development of building-related technologies.

Project Structure

The overall goals of the project are reflected by the composition of 7 work packages. Summing them up, the most important objectives of the project are as follows:

  1. Translation of the measures and instruments used in the European regulation on energy performance of buildings into demand for innovative energy technologies by increasing the level of information and know-how at the relevant players, that influence the effective national and regional implementation of the European regulation (WORKPACKAGE 1).
  2. Increase of the application of instruments such as Energy Performance Contracting (WORKPACKAGE 2) and Life Cycle Cost Analysis (WORKPACKAGE 3) in the building and facility management practice by reducing the entrance barriers to these instruments through targeted information and the development and dissemination directly applicable tools;
  3. Improving the "standard approach" for the refurbishment of residential buildings towards a more comprehensive approach (WORKPACKAGE 4);
  4. Putting a particular focus on the market penetration of technological concepts that are seen as key technologies for sustainable buildings:
    • micro/mini-CHP for heat and electricity supply of buildings, that promise a major contribution to meeting the indicative Community target of doubling the total share for CHP electricity production to 18% by 2010 (WORKPACKAGE 5);
    • Solar heating networks and combined solar and biomass heating systems, that already now allow the heating requirements of residential buildings to be met at acceptable costs (WORKPACKAGE 6);
  5. Setting-up an information channel for communication and information exchange inside the consortium as well as for a comprehensive dissemination towards target groups by putting in service a web-site and a set of training courses (WORKPACKAGE 7).
Keywords

To find similar reports, click on a keyword below:
Biomass & Bioenergy : Buildings : Electricity : Energy Efficiency : Heat/Heating : Legal initiatives : New Buildings : OPET Network : Polygeneration : Refurbishment of Buildings : Renewable Energy Sources & Systems : Solar Thermal : Training

Contacts

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AUSTRIA

AEE INTEC - Arbeitsgemeinschaft Erneuerbare Energie Institute for Sustainable Technologies

BIT - Verein für internationale Forschungs - Technologie und Bildungsk

EIV - Energieinstitut Vorarlberg

Energie Tirol Beratung-Forschung-Förderung

Österreichische Energieagentur - Austrian Energy Agency

BELGIUM

ICEDD - Institut de Conseil et d'Etudes en Développement Durable asbl

VTC - Vlaamse Thermie Coordinate

BULGARIA

BSREC - Black Sea Regional Energy Centre

SEC - Sofia Energy Centre Ltd

DENMARK

COWI A/S

ESTONIA

EERI - Estonian Energy Research Institute Tallinn University of Technology, OPET Estonia

FINLAND

Motiva Oy

FRANCE

ADEME - Agence de l'Environnement et de la Maîtrise de l'Energie French Environment and Energy Managment Agency

GERMANY

Berliner Energieagentur GmbH Berlin Energy Agency

PTJ - Projektträger Jülich Forschungszentrum Jülich GmbH

ZAB ZukunftsAgentur Brandenburg GmbH Brandenburg Economic Development Board

GREECE

CRES - Centre for Renewable Energy Sources

HUNGARY

BUTE - Budapest University of Technology & Economics

Energy Centre Hungary

ISRAEL

ICTAF - Interdisciplinary Center for Technological Analysis & Forecast Tel Aviv University

ITALY

ENEA - Ente per le Nuove tecnologie, l'Energiea e l'Ambiente

FAST - Federazione delle Assoziazioni Scientifiche e Tecniche

LATVIA

Ekodoma Ltd

LITHUANIA

LEI - Lithuanian Energy Institute OPET Lithuania

POLAND

KAPE SA - The Polish National Energy Conservation Agency Krajowa Agencja Poszanowania Energii SA

PORTUGAL

ADENE - Agęncia para a Energia Portuguese Energy Agency

ROMANIA

ENERO - Center for Promotion of Clean and Efficient Energy in Romania

SLOVAK REPUBLIC

ECB - Energy Centre Bratislava

SLOVENIA

University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Mechanical Engineering Center for Energy and Environmental Technologies

ZRMK - Technological Building & Civil Engineering Institute Indoor Environment and Building Physics Division

SPAIN

AAE - Agencia Andaluza de la Energía Andalusian Energy Agency

EVE - Ente Vasco de la Energía

IDAE - Instituto para la Diversificación y Ahorro de la Energía Spanish Institute for Energy Diversification and Saving

SWEDEN

STEM - Swedish Energy Agency

UNITED KINGDOM

NIFES - National Industrial Fuel Efficiency Service Ltd

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