Transcript Folie 1
German-Serbian Conference on Energy Efficiency in
Buildings
21 October 2014, Belgrade, Republic of Serbia
www.efficiency-from-germany.info
Energy Efficiency in Germany at a
Glance
Jelka Schedlinsky, eclareon GmbH
on behalf of the Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy
www.efficiency-from-germany.info
The Energy Efficiency Export
Initiative
www.efficiency-from-germany.info
Energy Efficiency Export Initiative
Goals of the Energy Efficiency Export Initiative
Show solutions in the field of energy efficiency
Implement and expand energy efficiency measures as a way to
underpin competitiveness
Transfer know-how into the hands of political decision-makers, key
opinion leaders, and market participants
Make a tangible contribution to international climate protection
The Initiative
Label
“Energy Efficiency – made in Germany“
Information
www.efficiency-from-germany.info
Network of experts
Decision-makers, business & industry
Instruments offered by the Initiative
Foreign Trade Fairs
Trade Missions
Information Events
Know-how Transfer
Qualification
Fact Finding Missions
6
Energy consumption patterns in
Germany
Efficiency targets and energy productivity in Germany
Source: BMWi, German Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy (2014)
Projected Development of Primary Energy Consumption in Germany
16000
Development of Energy Supply 2009 - 2050
14000
12000
Energy Efficiency
Nuclear
10000
PJ/a
8000
Gas
6000
Coal
Mineral Oil
RES
4000
2000
Source: BMU 2010
0
2009
2010
2020
2030
2040
2050
Energy Efficiency in Buildings – Sector relevance and targets
Final Energy Consumption in the
European Union
Industry
31,3%
Buildings
Transport
28,3%
Heating&ho
t water
(85%)
40,4%
Electricity
(15%)
Source: BDH
Sector targets
20% reduction in heating
requirements by 2020
80% reduction in primary energy by
2050
Building Stock: (nearly) climateneutral by 2050
Increase of annual
refurbishment rate by 100%
necessary (from 1 to 2%)
New Buildings: “nearly zero
energy” standard until 2019/2021
(2014 amendment of Energy Saving
Ordinance)
Governmental strategies and projects
Approaches for increase of energy efficiency in buildings
Legal requirements for
buildings
Obligation of
replacement
Key instrument:
EnEV (Energy Saving
Loans and subsidies
Tax incentives
Key instrument:
Building
Refurbishment
Programme
Regulation)
Regulatory policy
Financial support
Creation of market
transparency
Pilot projects
Information
campaigns
Qualification of
experts
Promotion
Source:
eclareon adapted from dena presentation
Government strategies and projects
The Building Refurbishment Programme
Loan model
Subsidy model
All responsible for
investments in residential
buildings
Owners of single and twofamily houses or freehold flats
With amortisation subsidy
up to EUR 50.000 per
accommodation unit
+ 5 % amortisation subsidy
resp.
+ 12,5 % amortisation subsidy
10 % subsidy, up to EUR
5.000 resp. 17,5 % subsidy, up
to EUR 8.750
without amortisation subsidy
up to EUR 50.000 per
accommodation unit
5% subsidy up to EUR 2.500
per accommodation unit
before
after
Photo: Kölner Nachrichten
The German Companies
Participating German Companies
Company
Representative
RAICO Bautechnik GmbH
Herr Massmann
Frank GmbH
Herr Große-Bley
geoKOAX GmbH
Herr Schäuble
EconTech Theiss GmbH
Herr Theiss
DRYMAT ® Systeme GmbH INTERNATIONAL
Herr Lindner
MIG Material Innovative Gesellschaft mbH
Herr Karch
Thank you for your attention!
eclareon GmbH
Jelka Schedlinsky
Giesebrechtstrasse 20
10629 Berlin
Germany
www.eclareon.com