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1 NRCan Report Anil Parekh Presented to CHBA TRC March 3, 2010.

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Presentation on theme: "1 NRCan Report Anil Parekh Presented to CHBA TRC March 3, 2010."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 NRCan Report Anil Parekh Presented to CHBA TRC March 3, 2010

2 2 Housing Research Activities  OEE Programs  Next Generation R-2000 Standard  ENERGY STAR for New Homes  Next Generation EnerGuide Rating System  ecoENERGY Retrofits – Homes program  Research Projects  Performance Results of House Mechanicals

3 3 R-2000 Standard Renewal

4 4  NRCan initiated renewal process for the R-2000 Standard.  Vision  Provide the home building industry and consumers with a technical standard that represents the leading edge of commercially-viable new home construction, based on available and proven technology, products, materials and building techniques.  Process and Progress to date:  CHBA provided recommendations for enhancements to the Standard.  Consultations and committee formation based on a Standard Council of Canada type of process  First meeting of the R-2000 Standard Renewal Committee was held in December 2009.  recommended energy efficiency target of 50% better than current R2000 or ERS-80  impact analysis was presented  Conference calls were conducted in the month of January to complete the review  Next face-to-face committee meeting will be in the on March 17 and 18

5 5 ENERGY STAR for New Homes

6 6  Common Technical Specification for Ontario  Brings together existing technical specifications to standardize the marketplace  No increase to the minimum requirements  Public Review December 2009  Currently finalizing the specification  Next Generation ENERGY STAR for New Homes  Process to begin in Spring 2010  Consultations and committee formation based on a Standard Council of Canada type of process

7 7 Next Generation EnerGuide Rating System

8 8 Development of the Next Generation EnerGuide Rating System  NRCan initiated revision process for the EnerGuide Rating System (ERS).  Vision  The vision for the next generation EnerGuide Rating System (ERS) process is to develop the most effective energy rating system, supported by the best tools and acceptable to and recognized by all stakeholders.  Parameters  able to rate existing and new houses including net zero homes on the same scale  only rate energy and factors that are related to energy use in the home  ability to account for electrical loads, air conditioning and renewable energy  complementary to energy codes.  offer stability for stakeholders using the system  able to help homeowners make informed decisions  Process and Progress to date:  First meeting of the ERS Policy Advisory Committee will be on March 11 and 12.  Consultations and committee formation based on a Standard Council of Canada type of process  Completed the background studies  Initiated survey of existing stakeholders

9 9 ecoENERGY Retrofits - Homes

10 10 ecoENERGY Retrofits - Homes  Program reach:  2008-09: 257,400 home evaluations and 76,368 received incentives  Apr 2009 to Feb 15, 2010: 302,770 evaluations and 162,130 received incentives  ecoENERGY total: 581,900 homes evaluated and 256,140 qualified for incentives  Popular with homes built before 1990 – almost 88% of all evaluations

11 11 Retrofit Measures  Replace heating system with ENERGY STAR qualified model: 67%  installation of 92% AFUE furnace with energy efficient motor  Add insulation to attic: 27%Insulate basement: 28%  Reduce air leakage (air sealing): 45%  Replace windows, doors with ENERGY STAR qualified units: 35%  Homeowners typically undertake more than one action  Solar DHW ~ 950 installations  GSHP ~ 6,745 installations

12 12 Indicators  581,900 pre-retrofit evaluations since April 1/07 (a total of more than 800,000 homes since 1998)  80 Service Organizations licensed to date  1,880 active energy advisors  Available across Canada  Target for providing homeowner service within 2 weeks  Energy Efficiency  Energy savings ranging from 32 to 98 GJ/year – average 50 GJ/year/house – about 22%  Improvement in Rating – average 10 points  GHG emissions – 3.1 tonnes per house per year  Federal incentive ~ $1,400 per house (matching incentives added in most jurisdictions)  Homeowners have 18 months to complete upgrades and apply for grant

13 13 R&D Energy Technology Highlights … Comparing Performance of Mechanical Systems

14 14 Performance of House Mechanicals  Objective  Energy efficiency and system effectiveness performance of residential space heating, hot water and ventilation systems  Three different systems  Conventional separate components: condensing furnace, induced-draft DHW and HRV  Combo: boiler, air handler and HRV  Integrated Mechanic System (IMS): space heat, hot water and HRV all integrated in a one unit  Method  Side-by-side testing at Canadian Centre for Housing Technology (CCHT)

15 15 Performance Verification at Canadian Centre for Housing Technology  Government of Canada test facility (www.ccht-cctr.gc.ca)  Research quality testing  Side-by-side comparisons  Commissioning -> benchmarking -> experiment

16 16 The Standard System  condensing natural gas furnace  AFUE 90%  power-vented natural gas hot water tank  EF of 0.58  heat recovery ventilator (HRV)  SRE of 69% at 0 C, and 62% at -25 C

17 17 The Combination System  Boiler - 90% AFUE, Energy Star® qualified.  Air handler  Pump between storage tank and boiler  Storage tank - 40 G (151L).  HRV - SRE - 69% at 0 C, and 62% at -25 C.

18 18 Integrated Mechanical System  Condensing boiler provides both space heat and hot water (Boiler AFUE 93%)  Integrated air handler has ECM motor  Integrated HRV with sensible recovery efficiency of 60% at 0 o C

19 19 Load Profile and Energy Use Predominantly DHW and ventilation Part loads: space heat + DHW + ventilation Full loads

20 20 The IMS uses slightly more energy when loads are high The IMS uses less energy during most of the year.

21 21 Energy Efficiency Levels

22 22 For More Information  CanmetENERGY Research  Anil Parekh at 613 947 1959 (Anil.Parekh@NRCan.gc.ca)Anil.Parekh@NRCan.gc.ca  Jamie Glouchkow (James.Glouchkow@NRCan.gc.ca)  Visit our Web site or contact us: www.ecoaction.gc.ca  1-800-387-2000 (publications)  1-800-622-6232 (homes)  ecoENERGY Retrofit program: Martin Gaudet Martin.Gaudet@NRCan.gc.ca  New Housing Programs: Jennifer Talsma Jennifer.Talsma@NRCan.gc.ca


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