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Validation of the use of Australian input-output data for building embodied energy simulation

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conference contribution
posted on 2003-01-01, 00:00 authored by Robert Crawford, G Treloar
Traditional!y, the simulation of buildings has focused 011 operational energy consumption in an attempt to determine the potential for energy savings. Whilst operational energy of Australian buildings accounts for around 20% of total energy consumption nationally, embodied energy represents 20 to 50 times the annual operational energy of 1110st Australian buildings. Lower values have been shown through a number of studies that have analysed the embodied energy of buildings and their products, however these have now shown to be incomplete in system boundary. Many of these studies have used traditional embodied energy analysis methods, such as process analysis and input-output analysis, Hybrid embodied energy analysis methods have been developed, but these need to be compared and validated. This paper reports on preliminary work on this topic. The findings so far suggest that current best-practice methods are sufficiently accurate for most typical applications, but this is heavily dependant upon data quality and availability.

History

Pagination

235 - 242

Location

Eindhoven, Netherlands

Open access

  • Yes

Start date

2003-08-11

End date

2003-08-14

ISBN-10

9038615663

Language

eng

Notes

Every reasonable effort has been made to ensure that permission has been obtained for items included in Deakin Research Online. If you believe that your rights have been infringed by this repository, please contact drosupport@deakin.edu.au

Publication classification

E1 Full written paper - refereed

Copyright notice

2003, IBPSA

Editor/Contributor(s)

G Augenbroe, J Hensen

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