Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

FINANCING ENERGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL IMPROVEMENT Peter James University of Bradford Higher Education Environmental Performance Improvement ( HEEPI) www.heepi.org.uk.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "FINANCING ENERGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL IMPROVEMENT Peter James University of Bradford Higher Education Environmental Performance Improvement ( HEEPI) www.heepi.org.uk."— Presentation transcript:

1 FINANCING ENERGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL IMPROVEMENT Peter James University of Bradford Higher Education Environmental Performance Improvement ( HEEPI) www.heepi.org.uk

2 WHY DO MORE? Rising utilities costs Tightening regulation - ‘Command and Control’ e.g. Part L/J Building Regs, WEEE - ‘ Carrots and Sticks ’ Government targets - Kyoto Protocol, EU commitments Sustainable planning Market/student/stakeholder demands

3 NEW REGULATIONS EU Emission Trading Scheme Carbon Reduction Commitment - pay for initial allowances - tradeable allowances - league table linked pot of money Display Energy Certificates

4 BARRIERS Money - Internal mechanisms - Limited external mechanisms Financial literacy Capacity - internal skills - right consultants

5 AGENDA What sources of external funding - are available? - could be available? What internal mechanisms can help? How can problems be made easier in future?

6 THE HEEPI PROJECT University of Bradford – ‘Ecoversity’ Steered by key sectoral organisations Green Gown Awards Events and Networking- 21 June Oxford’s Information Engineering Lab - 13 July Post Occupancy & Commissioning - Westminster - 23 August Biodiversity – Hertfordshire - Sept - Sustainable Laboratories Information Benchmarking – Buildings; Transport

7 SOUTHAMPTON ADMINISTRATION AND STUDENT SERVICES BUILDING

8 NATIONAL SCIENCE LEARNING CENTRE – UNIVERSITY OF YORK

9 PAST Reactive - as (after) regulations hit - as students protest - as planning applications must Basic energy management Isolated actions ‘ Worthy ’ policies

10 PRESENT – STRUGGLING TO BE PROACTIVE More sophisticated energy (and water) management Embryonic environmental management systems Cross-campus initiatives - curriculum as well as Estates Iconic buildings/campuses

11 DEVONSHIRE BUILDING, UNIVERSITY OF NEWCASTLE

12 OXSTALLS CAMPUS, UNIVERSITY OF GLOUCESTERSHIRE

13 BUILDINGS Many have high operating costs Many new buildings don ’ t achieve design brief and/or regulatory requirements Design briefs often aren ’ t anticipating future prices and requirements Disconnected capex/opex budgets Relatively low utilisation/productivity

14 HE PERFORMANCE - ENERGY Building Type Best (kWh m2) Average (kWh m2) Upper Quartile (kWh m2) Bio-labs (15) 252581<436 Residences (41) 161294<221

15 FUTURE ‘Greener construction’ - energy efficient - renewable energy and materials - natural lighting and ventilation - location and orientation - materials ‘Green travel’ More efficient use of space

16 FUTURE – INTEGRATION INTO THE MAINSTREAM Legitimates more efficient use of space - the most environmental building is the one not built - the greenest students and staff are those who travel least by cars and planes Integral part of brand/reputation/credibility - index of ‘future readiness’ Synergies of key design features - natural lighting, materials and ventilation - capital £1; operating £20; salaries £100-200 Buildings/estates as the curriculum

17 MANY SOLUTIONS ARE GOOD CONSTRUCTION PRACTICE Integrated design teams - integration of functions and services Thorough consideration of building function and operation, and how this might change Good project management with clear specification and responsibilities Effective commissioning, evaluation and feedback Thorough whole life costing

18 CLEAR BENEFITS WHEN SUCCESSFUL “minimal increases in upfront costs of about 2% to support green design would, on average, result in life cycle savings of 20% of total construction costs - more than ten times the initial investment” - The Costs and Financial Benefits of Green Buildings, A Report to California’s Sustainable Building Task Force

19 BARRIERS Trade-off issues Higher capital costs Disconnected capex/opex budgets Lack of knowledge/skills Poor learning cycles

20 WE BOTH WANT A LEAN ESTATE Light (ambience, footprint) Efficient (resources, productivity) Agile (reconfigurable, responsive) Normative (brand, excitement, experiential learning)


Download ppt "FINANCING ENERGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL IMPROVEMENT Peter James University of Bradford Higher Education Environmental Performance Improvement ( HEEPI) www.heepi.org.uk."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google