Transcript Document
Key challenges to delivering a
low carbon future
Ian Short and Ed Metcalfe
Institute for Sustainability
16 Sept 2010
Institute for Sustainability
An independent charity, led by a world class board representing UK industry,
academia and public sector
Our aim is to significantly accelerate delivery of sustainable cities and communities by:
Establishing practical demonstration projects
Monitoring, measuring and evaluating sustainable solutions
Sharing learning locally, nationally and internationally to inform future projects
and development
Working with a broad range of public, private and academic (primarily in built
environment) including: Arup, Canary Wharf Group, CIRIA, BSRIA, GE, Hyder, IBM,
Imperial College, M&S, NPL, Siemens, TWI, University College London, Veolia
Sister institute based in Shanghai
Approx 20 staff and turnover of circa £4m pa
Institute Core Activity
1. Research and Demonstration
Projects
Total Community
Retrofit
a) Resource efficient
buildings
b) Sustainable
infrastructure
c) Transport/logistics/
supply chain
2. Knowledge Hub
Knowledge Hub
3. Dissemination
Industry
SME support
Education/skills
Policy/regulation
Challenges to Mainstreaming Sustainability
1. Step change in aspiration and delivery
2. Holistic approach – collaboration
3. Monitoring, measurement, evaluation
4. Design Performance Gap
5. Sharing learning
6. Skills
Total Community Retrofit
The challenge:
Nearly eight out of ten people in UK live in an urban area
Adapting existing towns and cities – 80% of homes in 2050 already built
Step change in aspiration and delivery
Leveraging institutional investment
The project:
Community scale retrofit demonstrator projects (30,000+)
Deliver energy savings measures in the built environment, sustainable and smart
infrastructure, improved public spaces and socio-economic benefits
Total Community Retrofit - Demonstrating 2050 in 2015
Original image courtesy of AECOM
What is different about this approach?
What is happening now?
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Disparate, one-off schemes
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No joined up approach
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Not optimised, not cost-effective
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Limited scale and scope
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Incentives misaligned
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Limited private sector investment
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Focus on easy wins
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"Hard" projects not done
Scattered initiatives of limited scale
What is proposed?
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A comprehensive programme approach
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Integrated, holistic solutions that generate
economic benefits and competitiveness
through reducing resource consumption
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Creation of an enabling authority (public/
private/community)
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Large scale private finance
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Replication across a large number of
communities
Clustered, phased initiatives with scale to attract private finance
validation, replication
Phase 1
Phase 2
Phase 3
Phase 4
Monitoring, Measurement and Evaluation
Identified challenges;
Gap between performance and design
Occupants do not use buildings in the way intended
Lack of accountability for performance
Lack of independent advice
Progress is slow;
Innovation coordination failure
Failure in the confidence to invest
Consumer doubts
Many potential solutions;
But a scarcity of clear independent data to indicate which works best and in
what circumstances
Monitoring, Measurement and Evaluation
“Studies repeatedly show that buildings do not achieve
their design criteria in energy terms ....it is
extraordinary that so little priority is attached to seeing
how buildings perform in practice.”
The Low Carbon Construction IGT Emerging Findings
(March 2010)
Building Energy Performance – Identified Gaps
1. Design – Data to close the design-performance gap to up-skill
independent authoritative advisors on building energy solutions.
Life-cycle assessment of building performance; carbon as a design parameter
2. Testing and verification service for;
Components
Assemblies
Whole systems
3. Skills - Highly skilled construction and operation workforce
4. Standard testing on real, occupied buildings
Process improvement - accountability along whole of supply chain
Demonstration - user understanding of energy consumption and losses
Improving Building Energy Performance
1. National Centre for the Measurement of Building Efficiency
Accelerate energy performance improvement
Testing and verification to significantly improve availability and accuracy of energy
performance and embodied carbon information for new and existing buildings,
components and services in practice
Developing economic and business case with core partners NPL, UCL and ZCH
Identify funding and delivery models
2. Monitoring, Measurement and Evaluation Network
Provide objective, open data and extensive information to improve understanding on;
How real buildings perform
How people use energy in, and interact with, buildings
Develop responsive, coherent, critical mass for knowledge base
Disseminate learning and inform skills needs
Improving Building Energy Performance
“To convey the seriousness of what we are doing and its credibility,
it is really important where possible we do pilot, evaluate, publish
evidence, have it tested. We must also have sufficient confidence
that when evidence starts coming in that something is not
working, to be willing to change.”
David Willetts, The Times, 9/6/2010.
Retrofit and FLASH
Challenges
Retrofit 650,00 dwellings pa to 80% carbon reduction
Need to increase capability and up-skill the UK supply chain
SMEs have imperfect information and risk aversion to new products
Need more integrated systems approach for homes and communities
Need innovative business and employment opportunities
Solutions - The FLASH (Facilitated Learning and Sharing) project
Capture independently verified learning from demonstrator projects:
TSB Retrofit for the Future and Post-Occupancy Evaluation
MME Network
Rushenden Community Retrofit
Identify best practice and share learning nationally and internationally
Disseminate through partner networks to simulate supply and value
chains
Our Experience – Summary of the Challenges
1. Encouraging long-term commitment from Government to
encourage confidence to invest and ability to work at scale
2. Putting in place better systems to allow more holistic approach
3. Working collaboratively; nationally and internationally and cross
sector
4. Creating more accountability to address the gap between
performance and design through MME
5. Capturing and assessing outcomes and providing independent
results
6. Increasing capability of and up skilling the supply chain through
sharing what we learn
Thank You