• How Salt Lake's buildings affect its cli

    From ScienceDaily@1337:3/111 to All on Tue Jul 28 21:30:28 2020
    How Salt Lake's buildings affect its climate future

    Date:
    July 28, 2020
    Source:
    University of Utah
    Summary:
    With climate change, we'll need less natural gas for heat and more
    electricity for cooling -- but what's the balance? Researchers used
    hyper-localized climate models and building projections to find
    out. The answer is that buildings' energy use in the future varies
    wildly, depending on the climate scenario, and that local building
    policy now could have a big impact on energy use in the future.



    FULL STORY ========================================================================== Anyone who's lived or worked in old buildings knows that their heating
    and cooling systems can't compare to the efficiency, insulation and
    consistency of those in new buildings. But the quirks of old buildings'
    climate control systems aren't just seasonal annoyances -- they could
    shape the future of cities' energy use in a warming climate.


    ==========================================================================
    With warmer temperatures in both the summer and winter, we'll need less
    natural gas to heat buildings and more electricity to cool them --
    but what's the balance between those two effects? University of Utah researchers including Daniel Mendoza, a research assistant professor in
    the Department of Atmospheric Sciences and a visiting assistant professor
    in the Department of City & Metropolitan Planning, used hyper-localized
    climate models and building projections to find out. The answer,
    they write, is that buildings' energy use in the future varies wildly, depending on the climate scenario, and that local building policy now
    could have a big impact on energy use in the future.

    The results are published in World.

    Modeling the future Climate models come in various scales, from global to hyper-local. For the purposes of this study, Mendoza and his colleagues
    chose a hyper-local model focused on Salt Lake County, which includes
    Salt Lake City and its suburbs.

    "Using localized climate model output results is critical because climatic conditions are a very important input variable in building energy models," Mendoza says. "These conditions dictate how much energy will be required
    for heating and cooling which are a large component of a building's
    energy budget." Next, the team built a model of how changes in air
    temperature would affect the energy usage of buildings. They included
    the five commercial building types most common in the county: large
    office buildings, small office buildings, primary schools, full-service restaurants and high-rise multi-family apartment buildings. Some buildings proved more challenging to model than others.



    ==========================================================================
    "It was after realizing that restaurants are really complicated
    conditioning environments, that is, you have a fridge/freezer right
    next to an oven, when we understood how challenging it is to model HVAC
    demands for these buildings," Mendoza says.

    They also looked at building energy standards, which are determined
    largely by the age of the building. Then, they put in the possible
    composition of building types that might be present in Salt Lake County
    by 2040, based on projections by the Wasatch Front Regional Council.

    "We expect multi-family apartment buildings to be the fastest-growing
    building type to accommodate our growing population," Mendoza says. The projections show apartment buildings growing from just under 20% of
    commercial square footage in 2012 to almost 40% by 2040.

    Less heating, more cooling It's not surprising that, with annual average temperatures in Salt Lake County expected to rise between 1.6 and 4.3 DEGF
    (0.9 and 2.3 DEGC) by 2040, less natural gas will be needed for heating
    in the winter and more electricity will be needed for cooling in summer.



    ==========================================================================
    But the researchers found substantial variability in energy use according
    to building type. Small and large office buildings saw reduced natural gas usage of up to 75% and 30%, respectively, in the 2040 projection. Those
    types of buildings are projected to comprise a quarter of Salt Lake
    County's commercial buildings, so the reduction is substantial.

    But it is offset by the increased demand for cooling -- up to 30% more electricity needed by schools and restaurants and 20% more by high-rise apartments and office buildings, which together comprise more than half
    of all commercial buildings.

    Still a chance to choose Mendoza acknowledges that projections of building types aren't set in stone.

    "Accelerated population growth could modify building type distribution,"
    he says. "Faster than expected warming could also change predictions considerably." Given the anticipated demand for cooling electricity,
    Mendoza says, Salt Lake County could choose to generate that electricity through renewable sources, reducing the fossil fuel emissions that
    underlie the anticipated warming.


    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by University_of_Utah. Original written
    by Paul Gabrielsen.

    Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Daniel L. Mendoza, Carlo Bianchi, Jermy Thomas, Zahra
    Ghaemi. Modeling
    County-Level Energy Demands for Commercial Buildings Due to Climate
    Variability with Prototype Building Simulations. World, 2020; 1
    (2): 67 DOI: 10.3390/world1020007 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/07/200728182546.htm

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