2009 DOE Building Energy Database
2009 DOE Building Energy Database
2009 DOE Building Energy Database
October 2009
U.S. Residential and Commercial Buildings Total Primary Energy Consumption (Quadrillion Btu and Percent of Total) Electricity Coal Renewable(2) Sales Losses Total 0.15 0.6% 0.87 3.3% 4.35 10.51 14.86 56.2% 0.15 0.5% 0.74 2.4% 6.01 13.92 19.93 65.6% 0.10 0.3% 0.63 1.7% 8.02 18.26 26.28 69.8% 0.09 0.2% 0.58 1.5% 9.05 19.70 (3) 28.75 74.2% 0.09 0.2% 0.62 1.5% 9.67 20.71 30.38 74.0% 0.09 0.2% 0.61 1.4% 10.22 21.59 31.81 74.0% 0.09 0.2% 0.61 1.3% 10.92 23.04 33.96 74.7% 0.09 0.2% 0.61 1.3% 11.68 24.44 36.11 75.6% 0.09 0.2% 0.61 1.2% 12.50 25.82 38.32 76.5% Growth Rate 2006-Year 1.4% 1.1% 1.1% 1.1% 1.1%
-marketed
Natural Gas Petroleum (1) 7.52 28% 3.04 11% 7.22 24% 2.36 8% 8.35 22% 2.32 6% 7.42 19% 1.93 5% 7.99 19% 1.95 5% 8.46 20% 2.00 5% 8.77 19% 2.01 4% 8.98 19% 1.99 4% 9.11 18% 1.97 4%
TOTAL (2) 26.43 100% 30.41 100% 37.68 100% 38.77 100% 41.04 100% 42.97 100% 45.45 100% 47.78 100% 50.10 100%
1) Petroleum includes distillate and residual fuels, liquefied petroleum gas, kerosene, and motor gasoline. 2) Includes site and non-marketed renewable energy. 3) 2006 site -to-source electricity conversion = 3.18.
Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119 for 2006-2030 and Table A17, p. 143-144 for non-marketed renewable energy.
Source(s): EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Consumption, February 2008, Tables 8-12, p. 18-22 for 1980-2005; and EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008,
1.1.2
U.S. Buildings Site Renewable Energy Consumption (Quadrillion Btu) (1) Wood (2) 0.858 0.609 0.559 0.538 0.570 0.547 0.533 0.520 0.508 Solar Thermal (3) 0.000 0.056 0.024 0.038 0.043 0.052 0.059 0.066 0.073 Solar PV (3) 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.001 0.004 0.004 0.006 0.010 0.016 GSHP (4) 0.000 0.003 0.017 0.003 0.004 0.006 0.008 0.011 0.014 Total 0.858 0.668 0.599 0.581 0.621 0.609 0.607 0.607 0.611 Growth Rate 2006-Year 1.7% 0.5% 0.3% 0.2% 0.2%
1) Does not include renewable energy consumed by electric utilities (including hydroelectric). 2) Includes wood and wood waste, municipal solid waste, and other biomass used by the commercial sector to cogenerate electricity. 3) Includes only solar energy. 4) GHP = Ground-coupled heat pumps.
Table A17, p. 143-144 for 2006-2030; Annual Energy Outlook 2006, Feb. 2006, Table A17 p. 159; EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2005, Jan. 2005, Table A17 p.163; EIA; Annual Energy Outlook 2004, Jan. 2004, Table A18 p. 157; EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2002, Dec. 2001, Table A18 p.148 For 1999-2004 Solar
Source(s): EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Consumption, February 2008, Tables 8-12, p. 18-22 for 1980-2000; and EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008,
1.1.3
Buildings Share of U.S. Primary Energy Consumption (Percent) Buildings Commercial 18.3% 17.5% 17.7% 18.0% 18.1% 19.0% 19.8% 20.6% 21.2% Total Consumption (quads) 57.9 76.1 97.2 99.5 103.3 107.3 110.8 114.5 118.0
Residential 27.4% 22.4% 21.1% 20.9% 21.5% 21.0% 21.1% 21.1% 21.2%
| | | | | | | | |
Total 45.7% 40.0% 38.8% 38.9% 39.7% 40.0% 40.9% 41.6% 42.4%
Industry 36.0% 38.9% 36.1% 32.7% 32.2% 31.6% 30.9% 30.5% 29.6%
Transportation 18.3% 21.1% 25.2% 28.4% 28.1% 28.4% 28.2% 27.9% 28.0%
Total 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100%
| | | | | | | | |
Source(s): EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Consumption, February 2008, Tables 8-12, p. 18-22 for 1980-2005; and EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008,
1-1
October 2009
Space Heating (5) Lighting Space Cooling Water Heating Electronics (6) Refrigeration (7) Cooking Wet Clean (8) Ventilation (9) Computers Other (10) Adjust to SEDS (11) Total
Note(s):
| | | | | | | | | | | | |
Primary Total Percent 7.66 19.8% 6.86 17.7% 4.91 12.7% 3.72 9.6% 3.04 7.8% 2.23 5.8% 1.33 3.4% 1.30 3.3% 1.10 2.8% 0.89 2.3% 3.30 8.5% 2.43 6.3% 38.77 100%
1) Includes distillate fuel oil (1.12 quad) and residual fuel oil (0.9 quad). 2) Kerosene (0.12 quad) and coal (0.09 quad) are assumed attributable to space heating. Motor gasoline (0.05 quad) assumed attributable to other end-uses. 3) Comprised of wood space heating (0.41 quad), biomass (0.13 quad), solar water heating (0.03 quad), geothermal space heating (less than 0.01 quad), and solar photovoltaics (PV) less than 0.01 quad). 4) Site -to-source electricity conversion (due to generation and transmission losses) = 3.18. 5) Includes furnace fans (0.21 quad). 6) Includes color television (1.05 quad) and other office equipment (0.64 quad). 7) Includes refrigerators (1.24 quad) and freezers (0.49 quad). Includes commercial refrigeration. 9) Includes clothes washers (0.11 quad), natural gas clothes dryers (0.07 quad), electric clothes dryers (0.81 quad) and dishwashers (0.3 quad). Does not include water heating energy. 8) Commercial only; residential fan and pump energy use included proportionately in space heating and cooling. 10) Includes residential small electric devices, heating elements, motors, swimming pool heaters, hot tub heaters, outdoor grills, and natural gas outdoor lighting. Includes commercial service station equipment, ATMs, telecommunications equipment, medical equipment, pumps, emergency electric generators, combined heat and power in commercial buildings, and manufacturing performed in commercial buildings. 11) Energy adjustment EIA uses to relieve discrepancies between data sources. Energy attributable to the residential and commercial buildings sector, but not directly to specific end-uses.
National Energy Modeling System (NEMS) for AEO 2008, Mar. 2008; BTS/A.D. Little, Electricity Consumption by Small End-Uses in Residential Buildings, Aug. 1998, Appendix A for residential electric end-uses; BTS/A.D. Little, Energy Consumption Characteristics of Commercial Building HVAC Systems, Volume II: Thermal Distribution, Auxiliary Equipment, and Ventilation, Oct. 1999, p. 1-2 and 5-25 - 5-26; EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 1998, Dec. 1997, Table A5, p. 108-109 for 1995 ventilation; BTP/Navigant Consulting, U.S. Lighting Market Characterization, Volume I, Sept. 2002, Table 8-2, p. 63; and EIA, Supplement to the AEO 2008, April 2008, Table 22.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Tables A2, p. 117-119, Table A4, p. 122-123, Table A5, p. 124-125, and Table A17, p. 143-144; EIA,
Electronics, 2.8%
Cooking, 3.3%
Lighting, 7.8%
Water Heating, 9.6%
Ventilation, 12.7%
1-2
October 2009
Space Heating (5) Lighting Space Cooling Water Heating Electronics (6) Refrigeration (7) Wet Clean (8) Computers Cooking Ventilation (9) Other (10) Adjust to SEDS (11) Total
Note(s):
| | | | | | | | | | | | |
Primary Total Percent 8.21 20.0% 5.78 14.1% 4.06 9.9% 3.54 8.6% 2.96 7.2% 2.14 5.2% 1.27 3.1% 1.10 2.7% 0.96 2.3% 0.60 1.5% 7.09 17.3% 3.34 8.1% 41.04 100%
1) Includes distillate fuel oil (1.13 quad) and residual fuel oil (0.10 quad). 2) Kerosene (0.08 quad) and coal (0.09 quad) are assumed attributable to space heating. Motor gasoline (0.05 quad) assumed attributable to other end-uses. 3) Comprised of wood space heating (0.44 quad), biomass (0.13 quad), solar water heating (0.05 quad), geothermal space heating (less than 0.01 quad), and solar photovoltaics (PV) less than 0.01 quad). 4) Site -to-source electricity conversion (due to generation and transmission losses) = 3.14. 5) Includes furnace fans (0.20 quad). 6) Includes color television (1.23 quad). 7) Includes refrigerators (1.89 quad) and freezers (0.25 quad). Includes commercial refrigeration. 8) Includes clothes washers (0.09 quad), natural gas clothes dryers (0.07 quad), electric clothes dryers (0.80 quad) and dishwashers (0.29 quad). Does not include water heating energy. 9) Commercial only; residential fan and pump energy use included proportionately in space heating and cooling. 10) Includes residential smallelectric devices, heating elements, motors, swimming pool heaters, hot tub heaters, outdoor grills, and natural gas outdoor lighting. Includes commercial service station equipment, ATMs, telecommunications equipment, medical equipment, pumps, emergency electric generators, combined heat and power in commercial buildings, and manufacturing performed in commercial buildings. 11) Energy adjustment EIA uses to relieve discrepancies between data sources. Energy attributable to the residential and commercial buildings sector, but not directly to specific end-uses.
National Energy Modeling System (NEMS) for AEO 2008, Mar. 2008; and EIA, Supplement to the AEO 2008, April 2008, Table 22.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Tables A2, p. 117-119, Table A4, p. 122-123, Table A5, p. 124-125, and Table A17, p. 143-144; EIA,
Other , 17.3%
Lighting, 14.1%
Electronics, 7.2%
1-3
October 2009
Space Heating (5) Lighting Space Cooling Water Heating Electronics (6) Refrigeration (7) Computers Wet Clean (8) Cooking Ventilation (9) Other (10) Adjust to SEDS (11) Total
Note(s):
| | | | | | | | | | | | |
Primary Total Percent 8.65 19.0% 5.37 11.8% 4.55 10.0% 3.85 8.5% 3.79 8.3% 2.21 4.9% 1.31 2.9% 1.30 2.9% 1.08 2.4% 0.65 1.4% 9.03 19.9% 3.66 8.1% 45.45 100%
1) Includes distillate fuel oil (1.14 quad) and residual fuel oil (0.10 quad). 2) Kerosene (0.08 quad) and coal (0.09 quad) are assumed attributable to space heating. Motor gasoline (0.05 quad) assumed attributable to other end-uses. 3) Comprised of wood space heating (0.40 quad), biomass (0.13 quad), solar water heating (0.06 quad), geothermal space heating (0.01 quad), and solar photovoltaics (PV) less than 0.01 quad). 4) Site -to-source electricity conversion (due to generation and transmission losses) = 3.11. 5) Includes furnace fans (0.23 quad). 6) Includes color television (1.33 quad). 7) Includes refrigerators (1.93 quad) and freezers (0.29 quad). Includes commercial refrigeration. 8) Includes clothes washers (0.09 quad), natural gas clothes dryers (0.08 quad), electric clothes dryers (0.84 quad) and dishwashers (0.30 quad). Does not include water heating energy. 9) Commercial only; residential fan and pump energy use included proportionately in space heating and cooling. 10) Includes residential small electric devices, heating elements, motors, swimming pool heaters, hot tub heaters, outdoor grills, and natural gas outdoor lighting. Includes commercial service station equipment, ATMs, telecommunications equipment, medical equipment, pumps, emergency electric generators, combined heat and power in commercial buildings, and manufacturing performed in commercial buildings. 11) Energy adjustment EIA uses to relieve discrepancies between data sources. Energy attributable to the residential and commercial buildings sector, but not directly to specific end-uses.
National Energy Modeling System for AEO 2008, Mar. 2008.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Tables A2, p. 117-119, Table A4, p. 122-123, Table A5, p. 124-125, and Table A17, p. 143-144; and EIA,
2020 U.S. Buildings Energy End-Use Splits, by Fuel Type Adjust to SEDS , 8.1% Space Heating , 19.0%
Other , 19.9%
Lighting, 11.8%
Ventilation, 1.4%
1-4
October 2009
Space Heating (5) Lighting Space Cooling Water Heating Electronics (6) Refrigeration (7) Computers Wet Clean (8) Cooking Ventilation (9) Other (10) Adjust to SEDS (11) Total
Note(s):
| | | | | | | | | | | | |
Primary Total Percent 8.67 17.3% 5.61 11.2% 5.08 10.1% 3.87 7.7% 4.50 9.0% 2.40 4.8% 1.56 3.1% 1.40 2.8% 1.16 2.3% 0.71 1.4% 11.28 22.5% 3.85 7.7% 50.09 100%
1) Includes distillate fuel oil (1.45 quad) and residual fuel oil (0.12 quad). 2) Kerosene (0.11 quad) and coal (0.10 quad) are assumed attributable to space heating. Motor gasoline (0.05 quad) assumed attributable to other end-uses. 3) Comprised of wood space heating (0.38 quad), biomass (0.13 quad), solar water heating (0.07 quad), geothermal space heating (less than 0.01 quad), and solar photovoltaics (PV) 0.02 quad). 4) Site -to-source electricity conversion (due to generation and transmission losses) = 3.07. 5) Includes furnace fans (0.25 quad). 6) Includes color television (1.69 quad) and other office equipment (2.81 quad). 7) Includes refrigerators (2.10 quad) and freezers (0.34 quad). Includes commercial refrigeration. 8) Includes clothes washers (0.08 quad), natural gas clothes dryers (0.08 quad), electric clothes dryers (0.91 quad) and dishwashers (0.33 quad). Does not include water heating energy. 9) Commercial only; residential fan and pump energy use included proportionately in space heating and cooling. 10) Includes residential small electric devices, heating elements, motors, swimming pool heaters, hot tub heaters, outdoor grills, and natural gas outdoor lighting. Includes commercial service station equipment, ATMs, telecommunications equipment, medical equipment, pumps, emergency electric generators, combined heat and power in commercial buildings, and manufacturing performed in commercial buildings. 11) Energy adjustment EIA uses to relieve discrepancies between data sources. Energy attributable to the residential and commercial buildings sector, but not directly to specific end-uses.
National Energy Modeling System for AEO 2008, Mar. 2008
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Tables A2, p. 117-119, Table A4, p. 122-123, Table A5, p. 124-125, and Table A17, p. 143-144; and EIA,
2030 U.S. Buildings Energy End-Use Splits, by Fuel Type Adjust to SEDS , 7.7% Space Heating , 17.3%
Other , 22.5%
Lighting, 11.2%
Ventilation , 1.4%
Cooking, 2.3%
1-5
October 2009
Natural Gas 37% 31% 32% 31% 32% 31% 29% 28% 26%
Coal 29% 35% 37% 39% 38% 38% 39% 41% 43%
Hydroelectric 7% 6% 5% 5% 5% 5% 5% 5% 5%
Total 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100%
1) A generic quad is primary energy apportioned between the various primary fuels according to their relative consumption. 2) Electric imports included in renewables. 3) Indepentant rounding.
p. 117-119 for 2006-2030 consumption and Table A17, p. 143-144 for non-marketed renewable energy.
Source(s): EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Consumption, Feb. 2008, Tables 8-12, p. 18-22 for 1980-2000; and EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2,
Hydroelectric, 5.4%
1.1.9
Buildings Share of U.S. Electricity Consumption (Percent) Buildings Commercial 27% 31% 34% 36% 36% 38% 39% 40% 41% Delivered Total (quads) 7.15 9.26 11.67 12.49 13.20 13.85 14.54 15.26 16.05
Residential 34% 34% 35% 37% 37% 36% 36% 36% 37%
| | | | | | | | |
Total 61% 65% 69% 72% 73% 74% 75% 77% 78%
Industry 39% 35% 31% 27% 27% 26% 25% 23% 22%
Transportation 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0%
Total 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100%
| | | | | | | | | |
1) Buildings accounted for 81% (or $272 billion) of total U.S. electricity expenditures.
p. 137-139 for 2006-2030 consumption, Table A3, p. 120-121 for 2006 expenditures.
Source(s): EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Consumption, Feb. 2008, Tables 8-12, p. 18-22 for 1980-2000; and EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2,
1-6
October 2009
Buildings 1980 37% 1990 37% 2000 35% 2006 (1) 33% 2010 33% 2015 35% 2020 37% 2025 38% 2030 39%
Note(s):
Site Consumption Industry Electric Gen. Transportation 41% 19% 3% 43% 17% 3% 40% 22% 3% 35% 29% 3% 35% 29% 3% 35% 28% 3% 35% 25% 3% 36% 23% 3% 36% 22% 3%
| | | | | | | | |
U.S. Natural Gas Primary Consumption Total Buildings Industry Transportation (quads) 48% 49% 3% 20.38 47% 49% 3% 19.75 50% 47% 3% 23.80 54% 43% 3% 22.30 55% 43% 3% 23.93 55% 42% 3% 24.35 56% 41% 3% 24.01 56% 41% 3% 23.66 56% 41% 3% 23.39
1) Buildings accounted for 58% (or $97 billion) of total U.S. natural gas expenditures.
p. 117-119 for 2006-2030 consumption, Table A3, p. 120-121 for 2006 expenditures.
Source(s): EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Consumption, Feb. 2008, Tables 8-12, p. 18-22 for 1980-2000; and EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2,
1.1.11
Buildings Share of U.S. Petroleum Consumption (Percent) U.S. Petroleum Total (quads) 34.2 33.6 38.4 40.1 40.5 41.8 42.2 42.8 44.0
Buildings 9% 7% 6% 5% 5% 5% 5% 5% 4%
Site Consumption Industry Electric Gen. Transportation 28% 8% 56% 25% 4% 64% 24% 3% 67% 25% 2% 69% 24% 1% 70% 23% 1% 71% 22% 1% 72% 21% 1% 73% 21% 1% 73%
| | | | | | | | |
Primary Consumption Buildings Industry Transportation 14% 31% 56% 10% 26% 64% 8% 25% 67% 6% 25% 69% 6% 24% 70% 6% 23% 71% 6% 22% 72% 6% 22% 73% 6% 21% 73%
1) Buildings accounted for an estimated 7.3% (or $30 billion) of total U.S. petroleum expenditures.
p. 117-119 for 2006-2030 consumption, Table A3, p. 120-121 for 2006 expenditures.
Source(s): EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Consumption, Feb. 2008, Tables 8-12, p. 18-22 for 1980-2000; and EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2,
1.1.12
Buildings Share of U.S. Petroleum Consumption (Million Barrels per Day) Buildings Commercial 0.92 0.64 0.56 0.43 0.39 0.42 0.43 0.44 0.44
Residential 1.31 0.96 1.08 0.69 0.71 0.72 0.73 0.72 0.72
l l l l l l l l l
Total 2.22 1.60 1.63 1.12 1.10 1.14 1.15 1.16 1.16
Industry 5.30 4.50 5.07 4.81 4.67 4.63 4.48 4.41 4.45
Transportation 9.57 10.89 13.05 13.02 13.36 14.00 14.34 14.66 15.19
Total 19.33 18.59 21.39 20.07 20.23 20.90 21.13 21.39 21.96
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Table 5.13a for 1980-2005 buildings, Table 5.13b for 1980 to 2005 industry, Table 5.13c for 1980-2005 transportation, and Table 5.13d for 1980-2005 electricity generators; and EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2007, Table A2, p. 117-119 for 2006-2030 consumption; EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Consumption, Feb. 2008, Tables 8-12, p. 18-22 for 1980-2005.
1-7
October 2009
Energy Consumption (Quad) Region/Country 1990 2005 2010 United States 84.7 100.1 21.7% 103.3 OECD Europe 69.9 81.4 17.6% 83.9 China 27.0 67.1 14.5% 87.3 Russia 39.0 30.3 6.6% 32.7 Other Non-OECD Asia 12.5 26.6 5.8% 30.5 Japan 18.4 22.6 4.9% 22.4 Central & S. America 14.5 23.4 5.1% 27.7 Middle East 11.3 22.9 5.0% 26.4 Oth. Non-OECD Europe 28.3 20.4 4.4% 22.4 India 8.0 16.2 3.5% 19.4 Africa 9.5 14.4 3.1% 16.5 Canada 11.1 14.3 3.1% 15.7 South Korea 3.8 9.3 2.0% 10.3 Mexico 5.0 6.9 1.5% 7.4 Australia & N. Zealand 4.4 6.3 1.4% 6.6 Total World 347.3 462.2 100% 512.5
Population (million) 1990 2005 2010 254 297 4.6% 311 497 536 8.2% 547 1,155 1,313 20.2% 1,352 148 144 2.2% 140 743 984 15.1% 1,060 124 128 2.0% 128 360 454 7.0% 483 137 193 3.0% 213 200 198 3.0% 199 849 1,134 17.4% 1,220 636 922 14.2% 1,032 28 32 0.5% 34 43 48 0.7% 49 84 104 1.6% 110 20 24 0.4% 26 5,278 6,512 100% 6,903
Annual Growth Rate 1990-2005 2005-2010 Energy Pop. Energy Pop. 1.1% 1.0% 0.6% 0.9% 1.0% 0.5% 0.6% 0.4% 6.3% 0.9% 5.4% 0.6% -1.7% -0.2% 1.5% -0.6% 5.2% 1.9% 2.8% 1.5% 1.4% 0.2% -0.2% 0.0% 3.2% 1.6% 3.4% 1.2% 4.8% 2.3% 2.9% 2.0% -2.2% -0.1% 1.9% 0.1% 4.8% 1.9% 3.7% 1.5% 2.8% 2.5% 2.8% 2.3% 1.7% 0.9% 1.9% 1.2% 6.1% 0.7% 2.1% 0.4% 2.2% 1.4% 1.4% 1.1% 2.4% 1.2% 0.9% 1.6% 1.9% 1.4% 2.1% 1.2%
Source(s): EIA, International Energy Outlook 2008, June 2008, Table A1, p. 83 and Table A14, p. 97.
Russia, 6.6%
China, 14.5%
1-8
October 2009
Electricity 33.86 32.78 28.12 30.52 31.37 30.04 30.20 30.33 30.63
Avg. 16.35 17.32 16.85 21.78 21.56 20.19 20.45 21.04 22.00
Electricity 34.62 30.27 25.07 27.75 27.89 25.52 25.64 25.71 26.17
Avg. 17.19 17.32 16.46 20.75 20.69 18.93 19.25 19.67 20.47
Building Avg. (3) 16.68 17.32 16.69 21.33 21.19 19.63 19.91 20.41 21.28
1) Residential petroleum products include distillate fuel, LPG, and kerosene. 2) Commercial petroleum products include distillate fuel, LPG, kerosene, motor gasoline, and residual fuel. 3) In 2005, buildings average electricity price was $29.16/10^6 Btu or ($0.10/kWh), average natural gas price was $12.655/10^6 Btu ($13.03/1000 CF), and petroleum was $17.94/10^6 Btu ($1.94/gal.). Averages do not include wood or coal prices.
p. 18-19 for 1980-2005 consumption; EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008 Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119, Table A3, p. 120-121, Table A12, p. 138, and Table A13, p. 139 for 2006-2030 consumption and prices; and EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for price deflators.
Source(s): EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Prices and Expenditures, Feb. 2008, Tables 2-3, p. 24-25 for 1980-2005 and prices for note, Tables 8-9,
1.2.2
Building Energy Prices, by Year and Fuel Type ($2006) Residential Buildings Natural Gas Distillate Oil (/therm) ($/gal) 77.68 1.46 80.38 1.34 89.00 1.45 133.99 1.98 121.52 2.16 112.02 2.07 113.94 2.08 119.35 2.11 129.12 2.18 Commercial Buildings Natural Gas Distillate Oil (/therm) ($/gal) 71.63 1.33 67.12 0.73 76.39 0.78 115.03 1.29 105.95 1.51 96.75 1.19 99.06 1.19 104.67 1.29 114.32 1.38
Electricity (/kWh) 11.55 11.18 9.59 10.41 10.70 10.25 10.30 10.35 10.45
LPG ($/gal) 2.10 1.59 1.61 2.49 2.39 1.98 1.98 2.10 2.26
Electricity (/kWh) 11.81 10.33 8.55 9.47 9.52 8.71 8.75 8.77 8.93
Residual Oil ($/gal) 1.93 1.18 1.21 2.02 2.11 1.79 1.84 1.92 2.08
Source(s): EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Prices and Expenditures, Feb. 2008, p. Tables 2-3, p. 24-25 for 1980-2005; EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A3, p. 120-121 for 2006-2030 and Table G1, p. 215 for fuels' heat content; and EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for price deflators.
1-9
October 2009
Electricity 82.9 103.3 114.4 140.8 155.2 150.9 158.7 167.7 180.0
Total 148.0 157.2 180.8 225.6 241.7 232.6 243.2 256.3 274.7
Electricity 66.0 86.6 99.2 123.1 131.9 132.6 145.3 158.1 173.3
Total Building Total Expenditures 100.7 248.7 112.8 270.0 131.2 312.0 166.7 392.2 173.9 415.5 173.3 405.9 188.9 432.2 205.8 462.1 226.9 501.6
1) Expenditures exclude wood and coal. 2006 U.S. energy expenditures were 1.14 trillion. 2) Residential petroleum products include distillate fuel oil, LPG, and kerosene. 3) Commercial petroleum products include distillate fuel oil, LPG, kerosene, motor gasoline, and residual fuel.
p. 117-119 and Table A3, p. 120-121 for 2006-2030; and EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for price deflators.
Source(s): EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Prices and Expenditures, Feb. 2008, p. 24-25 for 1980-2005; EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2,
500
300
Commercial Buildings
200
100
0 1980
1985
1990
1995
2000
2005
Year
2010
2015
2020
2025
2030
1-10
October 2009
Space Heating (3) Lighting Space Cooling Water Heating (4) Electronics (5) Refrigeration (6) Cooking Wet Clean (7) Ventilation (8) Computers Other (9) Adjust to SEDS (10) Total
Note(s):
Coal 0.2
2.6
1.3
3.9
5.6 1.0
0.7
0.7
1.0 2.4
0.2
Electricity 15.5 62.0 44.8 18.1 28.0 20.8 8.1 11.7 9.1 8.0 23.2 14.5 263.8
Total 91.4 62.0 45.0 42.7 28.0 20.8 14.4 12.7 9.1 8.0 32.8 25.5 392.4
Percent 23.3% 15.8% 11.5% 10.9% 7.1% 5.3% 3.7% 3.2% 2.3% 2.0% 8.4% 6.5% 100%
1) Expenditures include coal and exclude wood . 2) Includes kerosene space heating ($1.2 billion) and motor gasoline other uses ($1.0 billion). 3) Includes furnace fans ($1.7 billion). 4) Includes residential recreation water heating ($1.3 billion). 5) Includes color televisions ($10.1 billion) and other electronics ($17.9 billion). 6) Includes refrigerators ($18.3 billion) and freezers ($2.5 billion). 7) Includes clothes washers ($1.1 billion), natural gas clothes dryers ($1.0 billion), electric clothes dryers ($7.7 billion) and dishwashers ($2.9 billion). 8) Commercial only; residential fan and pump energy use included proportionately in space heating and cooling. 9) Includes residential small electric devices, heating elements, motors, swimming pool heaters, hot tub heaters, outdoor grills, and natural gas outdoor lighting. Includes commercial services station equipment, ATMs, telecommunications equipment, medical equipment, pumps, lighting, emergency electric generators, manufacturing performed in commercial buildings. 10) Expenditures related to an energy adjustment EIA uses to relieve discrepancies between data sources. Energy attributable to the residential and commercial buildings sectors, but not directly to specific end-uses.
consumption, and Table A5, p. 124-125 for commercial energy consumption; EIA, National Energy Modeling System for AEO 2008, Mar. 2008; EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Prices and Expenditures, Feb. 2008, p. 24-25 for coal prices; EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for price deflators; BTS/A.D. Little, Electricity Consumption by Small End-Uses in Residential Buildings, Aug. 1998, Appendix A for residential electric end-uses; BTS/A.D. Little, Energy Consumption Characteristics of Commercial Building HVAC Systems, Volume II: Thermal Distribution, Auxiliary Equipment, and Ventilation, Oct. 1999, p. 1-2, 5-25 and 5-26 for commercial ventilation; and BTP/Navigant Consulting, U.S. Lighting Market Characterization, Volume I, Sept. 2002, Table 8-2, p. 63 for commercial lighting.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119, Table A3, p. 120-121 for prices, Table A4, p. 122-123 for residential energy
Refrigeration , 20.8
Lighting, 62.0
1-11
October 2009
Space Heating (3) Lighting Space Cooling Water Heating Electronics (4) Refrigeration (5) Wet Clean (6) Cooking Computers Ventilation (7) Other (8) Adjust to SEDS (9) Total
Note(s):
Coal 0.2
2.3
1.2
3.5
0.9 5.3
0.8
0.8
1.1 2.6
0.2
Electricity 15.4 53.8 38.6 16.3 27.7 20.6 11.9 4.5 10.1 5.3 60.8 22.2 287.0
Total 94.5 53.8 38.9 38.7 27.7 20.6 12.8 10.6 10.1 5.3 70.1 32.0 415.0
Percent 22.8% 13.0% 9.4% 9.3% 6.7% 5.0% 3.1% 2.5% 2.4% 1.3% 16.9% 7.7% 100%
1) Expenditures include coal and exclude wood. 2) Includes kerosene space heating ($1.3 billion) and motor gasoline other uses ($1.1 billion). 3) Includes furnace fans ($2.0 billion). 4) Includes color televisions ($12.3 billion). 5) Includes refrigerators ($18.1 billion) and freezers ($2.5 billion). 6) Includes clothes washers ($1.0 billion), natural gas clothes dryers ($0.9 billion), electric clothes dryers ($8.0 billion) and dishwashers ($2.9 billion). 7) Commercial only; residential fan proportionately in space heating and cooling. 8) Includes residential small electric devices, heating elements, motors, swimming pool heaters, hot tub heaters, outdoor grills, and natural gas outdoor lighting. Includes commercial services station equipment, ATMs, telecommunications equipment, medical equipment, pumps, lighting, emergency electric generators, manufacturing performed incommercial buildings. 10) Expenditures related to an energy adjustment EIA uses to relieve discrepancies between data sources. Energy attributable to the residential and commercial buildings sectors, but not directly to specific end-uses.
consumption, and Table A5, p. 124-125 for commercial energy consumption; EIA, National Energy Modeling System for AEO 2008, Mar. 2008; EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Prices and Expenditures, Feb. 2008, p. 24-25 for coal prices; EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for price deflators.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119, Table A3, p. 120-121 for prices, Table A4, p. 122-123 for residential energy
2010 Buildings Energy End-Use Expenditure Splits, by Fuel Type ($2006 Billion)
Lighting, 53.78180487
Refrigeration , 20.57354751
Electronics , 27.65421075 Water Heating , 38.67759895 Space Cooling, 38.85601668
1-12
October 2009
Space Heating (3) Lighting Space Cooling Water Heating (4) Electronics (5) Refrigeration (6) Wet Clean (7) Computers Cooking Ventilation (8) Other (9) Adjust to SEDS (10) Total
Note(s):
Coal 0.2
1.8
1.1
2.9
0.9 5.7 2.8 7.2 93.8 0.3 2.6 15.9 0.8 6.6 0.8 14.3 1.0 2.4 0.8 7.9 2.6 33.4
0.2
Electricity 15.7 46.6 41.5 18.1 33.2 20.3 11.9 11.4 4.7 4.1 73.9 22.6 304.0
Total 92.4 46.6 41.7 40.6 33.2 20.3 12.8 11.4 11.2 4.1 84.6 32.3 431.3
Percent 21.4% 10.8% 9.7% 9.4% 7.7% 4.7% 3.0% 2.6% 2.6% 1.0% 19.6% 7.5% 100%
1) Expenditures include coal and exclude wood . 2) Includes kerosene space heating ($1.4 billion) and motor gasoline other uses ($1.0 billion). 3) Includes furnace fans ($2.2 billion). 5) Includes color televisions ($12.9 billion). 6) Includes refrigerators ($17.6 billion) and freezers ($2.8 billion). 7) Includes clothes washers ($0.8 billion), natural gas clothes dryers ($0.9 billion), electric clothes dryers ($8.2 billion) and dishwashers ($2.9 billion). 8) Commercial only; residential fan and pump energy use included proportionately in space heating and cooling. 9) Includes residential small electric devices, heating elements, motors, swimming pool heaters, hot tub heaters, outdoor grills, and natural gas outdoor lighting. Includes commercial services station equipment, ATMs,telecommunications equipment, medical equipment, pumps, lighting, emergency electric generators, manufacturing performed in commercial buildings. 10) Expenditures related to an energy adjustment EIA uses to relieve discrepancies between data sources. Energy attributable to the residential and commercial buildings sectors, but not directly to specific end-uses.
consumption, and Table A5, p. 124-125 for commercial energy consumption; EIA, National Energy Modeling System for AEO 2008, Mar. 2008; EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Prices and Expenditures, Feb. 2008, p. 24-25 for coal prices; EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for price deflators
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119, Table A3, p. 120-121 for prices, Table A4, p. 122-123 for residential energy
2020 Buildings Energy End-Use Expenditure Splits, by Fuel Type ($2006 Billion)
Other , 84.61790408
Ventilation , 4.108926284 Cooking, 11.24218161 Computers, 11.36324259 Wet Clean , 12.77360634 Refrigeration , 20.34091452
Electronics , 33.21039529
Lighting, 46.57424
1-13
October 2009
Space Heating (3) Lighting Space Cooling Water Heating (4) Electronics (5) Refrigeration (6) Wet Clean (7) Cooking Computers Ventilation (8) Other (9) Adjust to SEDS (10) Total
Note(s):
Coal 0.2
1.9
1.1
2.9
1.1 7.1
0.9
0.9
1.1 2.7
0.2
Electricity 16.5 50.1 47.9 19.2 40.9 22.7 13.1 5.2 14.0 4.2 94.0 25.5 353.3
Total 103.1 50.1 48.1 44.6 40.9 22.7 14.2 13.2 14.0 4.2 108.2 36.0 499.4
Percent 20.6% 10.0% 9.6% 8.9% 8.2% 4.5% 2.8% 2.6% 2.8% 0.8% 21.7% 7.2% 100%
1) Expenditures include coal and exclude wood . 2) Includes kerosene space heating ($1.3 billion) and motor gasoline other uses ($1.1 billion). 3) Includes furnace fans ($2.4 billion). 5) Includes color televisions ($16.9 billion). 6) Includes refrigerators ($19.3 billion) and freezers ($3.4 billion). 7) Includes clothes washers ($0.8 billion), natural gas clothes dryers ($1.1 billion), electric clothes dryers ($9.0 billion) and dishwashers ($3.3 billion). 8) Commercial only; residential fan and pump energy use included proportionately in space heating and cooling. 9) Includes residential small electric devices, heating elements, motors, swimming pool heaters, hot tub heaters, outdoor grills, and natural gas outdoor lighting. Includes commercial services station equipment, ATMs, telecommunications equipment, medical equipment, pumps, lighting, emergency electric generators, manufacturing performed in commercial buildings. 10) Expenditures related to an energy adjustment EIA uses to relieve discrepancies between data sources. Energy attributable to the residential and commercial buildings sectors, but not directly to specific end-uses.
consumption, and Table A5, p. 124-125 for commercial energy consumption; EIA, National Energy Modeling System for AEO 2008, Mar. 2008; EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Prices and Expenditures, Feb. 2008, p. 24-25 for coal prices; EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for price deflators.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119, Table A3, p. 120-121 for prices, Table A4, p. 122-123 for residential energy
1.2.8 Year 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989
Implicit Price Deflators (2000 = 1.00) Implicit Price Deflator 0.54 0.59 0.63 0.65 0.68 0.70 0.71 0.73 0.76 0.79 Year 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 Implicit Price Deflator 0.82 0.84 0.86 0.88 0.90 0.92 0.94 0.95 0.96 0.98 Year 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 Implicit Price Deflator 1.00 1.02 1.04 1.06 1.09 1.13 1.17
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377.
1-14
October 2009
- 2006 estimated value of all U.S. construction is $1.77 trillion (including renovation; heavy construction; public works; residential, commercial, and industrial new construction; and non-contract work). - Compared to the $13.2 trillion U.S. gross domestic product (GDP), all construction holds a 13.4% share. - In 2006, residential and commercial building renovation (valued at $438 billion) and new building construction (valued at $785 billion) is estimated to account for over 69% (approximately $1.22 trillion) of the $1.77 trillion.
Source(s): National Science and Technology Council, Construction & Building: Interagency Program for Technical Advancement in Construction and Building, 1999, p. 5; DOC, 1997 Census of Construction Industries: Industry Summary, Jan. 2000, Table 7, p. 15; DOC, Annual Value of Construction Put in Place, August 2008; DOC, Expenditures for Residential Improvements and Repairs by Property Type, Table S2, August 2008; and EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for price deflators and GDP.
1.3.2
Value of New Building Construction Relative to GDP, by Year ($2006 Billion) Value of New Construction Put in Place Residential Commercial (1) All Bldgs. (1) 154.4 148.7 303.0 198.5 210.4 408.9 194.1 211.7 405.8 221.8 190.0 411.7 312.2 291.9 604.1 489.6 283.3 784.7 Bldgs. Percent of Total U.S. GDP 5.0% 5.8% 4.9% 4.4% 5.3% 6.1%
1) New buildings construction differs from Table 1.3.2 by excluding industrial building construction.
Private Construction Put in Place, August 2008 for 1995-2006; DOC, Annual Value of Public Construction Put in Place, August 2008 for 1995-2006; DOC, Expenditures for Residential Improvements and Repairs by Property Type, July 2007; and EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for GDP and price deflators.
Source(s): DOC, Current Construction Reports: Value of New Construction Put in Place, C30, Aug. 2003, Table 1 for 1980-1990; DOC, Annual Value of
1.3.3
Value of Building Improvements and Repairs Relative to GDP, by Year ($2006 Billion) (1) Value of Improvements and Repairs Residential Commercial All Bldgs. 99.9 N.A. N.A. 137.2 130.4 (2) 267.7 164.8 132.6 (3) 297.4 158.1 140.6 298.7 178.2 122.8 301.0 228.2 209.7 437.9 Bldgs. Percent of Total U.S. GDP N.A. 3.8% 3.6% 3.2% 2.6% 3.3%
1) Improvements includes additions, alterations, reconstruction, and major replacements. Repairs include maintenance. 2) 1986. 3) 1989.
Residential Improvements and Repairs by Property Type, Table S2, August 2008 for 1995-2006; DOC, Current Construction Reports: Expenditures for Nonresidential Improvements and Repairs: 1992, CSS/92, Sept. 1994, Table A, p. 2 for 1986-1990 expenditures; DOC, 1997 Census of Construction Industries: Industry Summary, Jan. 2000, Table 7, p. 15; DOC, Annual Value of Private Construction Put in Place, July 2008 for 1995-2006; and EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for GDP and price deflators.
Source(s): DOC, Expenditures for Residential Improvements and Repairs by Property Type, Quarterly, May 2005 for 1980-1990; DOC, Expenditures for
1-15
October 2009
Sector Average Construction R&D (1) Heavy Construction Special Trade Construction U.S. Average of All Private R&D (2) Manufacturing Average Service Industry Average
Percent of Sales Building Technology Appliances 2.0 Lighting 1.2 HVAC 1.5 Fans, Blowers, & Air Cleaning Equipment 1.6 Lumber and Wood Products 0.3 Commercial Building Operations 2.2
Note(s):
Source(s): National Science Foundation, Research and Development in Industry: 2003, Table 27, p. 76-77; and Schonfeld & Associates, R&D
1.3.5
1997/1998 International Investment into Construction and Energy R&D Construction Percent of Private R&D to Total Private R&D 0.2 0.3 0.3 1.0 0.3 2.1 0.4 0.9 0.6 0.8 Gas, and Water Percent of Private R&D to Total Private R&D 0.2 2.7 0.3 3.0 1.7 0.9 1.4 0.5 0.8 1.6 Mining Percent of Private R&D to Total Private R&D 0.1 2.9 0.5 1.8 0.0 0.0 1.4 3.3 1.1 0.7
United States Canada Germany France Italy Japan United Kingdom Russian Federation Sweden Finland
Source(s): National Science Foundation, Science & Engineering Indicators -- 2002, Volume 1, Jan. 2002, Table 4-16, p. 4-53.
1.3.6
FY2003-2005 Green Building R&D, as Share of Federal Budget and by Organization Percent of U.S. Federal Budget 57.2% 23.1% 8.0% 6.3% 1.5% 1.5% 0.7% 0.2% 1.6% 100% Average Annual Funding ($1,000s) 123,170 25,317 22,940 11,100 7,500 5,800 5,000 3,000 2,400
Budget Function National Defense Health Other energy, general science, natural resources, and environment Space research and technology Transportation Agriculture Veterans' benefits and services research Green building Other functions (2) Total
Note(s):
| | | | | | | | |
Organization DOE EPA NSF PIER (1) DOC-NIST NYSERDA HUD GSA ASHRAE
1) PIER = Public Interest Energy Research 2) Includes education, training, employment, and social services; income security; and commerce.
Source(s): U.S. Green Building Council, Green Building Research Funding: An Assessment of Current Activity in the United States, 2006, Chart 1, p. 3, Chart 2, p. 3.
1-16
October 2009
(4)
Employees, in thousands Architects Construction (1) N.A. 3,065 N.A. 3,861 215 5,183 180 6,735 207 6,976 235 7,336 221 7,689
Number of Residential Builder Establishments with Payrolls, in thousands (2) New Construction Remodeling Both Total (3) 14.4 21.7 57.5 93.6 38.4 32.8 48.1 119.3 36.3 43.3 51.0 130.6 46.6 33.6 52.1 134.1 95.4 28.0 47.7 167.4
1) Does not include industrial building or heavy construction (e.g., dam and bridge building). In 1999, 76% of the employment shown is considered for production. The entire U.S. construction industry employs an estimated 10 million people, including manufacturing. 2) In 2000, NAHB report having 200,000 members, one-third of which were builders. 3) Excludes homebuilding establishments without payrolls, estimated by NAHB at an additional 210,000 in 1992. 4) NAHB reports that 2,448 full-time jobs in construction and related industries are generated from the construction of every 1,000 single-family homes and 1,030 jobs are created from the construction of every 1,000 multi-family units.
U.S. 2004-2005, December 2004, Table 597, p. 385 for 2003 architect employment, Table 602 for 2005 architect employment, Table 613, p. 400; DOC, 1992 Census of Construction Activities: U.S. Summary, CC92-I-27, Jan. 1996, p. 27-5 for construction employees; DOC, 1997 Economic Census: Construction - Industry Summary, EC97C23IS, Jan. 2000, Table 2, p. 8 for industrial builders; DOC, 1997 Economic Census: Construction Single-Family Housing Construction, EC97C-2332A, Nov. 1999, Table 10, p. 14 for 1997 builder establishments; DOC, 2002 Economic Census: Construction - New Single-Family Housing Construction, EC02-231-236115, Dec. 2004, New Housing Operatives, ECO2-231-236118, Dec. 2004, Residential Remodelers, EC02-231-236119, Dec. 2004, Industrial Building Construction, 231-236210, Dec. 2004; NAHB, Housing Economics, May 1995, Table 2, p. 14 for 1982-1992 builder establishments; National Science and Technology Council, Construction & Building: Federal Research and Development in Support of the U.S. Construction industry for construction employees in Note 1; NAHB, Housing at the Millennium: Facts, Figures, and Trends, May 2000, p. 21 for Note 2; and NAHB, 1997 Housing Facts, Figures and Trends, 1997, p. 35 for Note 3, and p. 13 for Note 4.; DOC, Statistical Abstract of the U.S. 2008, May 2008, table 612, p. 401 for 2003-2006 construction employment and Table 598, p. 388 for 2006 Architects Employed
Source(s): DOC, Statistical Abstract of the U.S. 2001, May 2002, Table 593, p. 380 for 2000 architect employment, Table 609, p. 393; Statistical Abstract of the
1.3.8
Heating, Cooling, and Ventilation Equipment Trades, by Year (Thousand Employees) 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2003
Industry Air-Conditioning and Refrigeration Equipment (incl. warm-air furnaces): SIC 3585 - Total Employment - Production Workers Plumbing, Heating, and Air-Conditioning Contractors: SIC 171 - Total Employment - Construction Workers Wholesalers of Hardware, Plumbing and Heating Equipment: SIC 507 - Total Employment
118.4 81.6
122.8 87.2
126.9 92.4
136.3 102.4
150.2 111.6
109.1 76.7
532.8 400.4
605.1 447.3
649.2 476.7
736.5 542.4
928.5 687.2
844.9 630.4
242.7
254.1
283.8
288.2
318.3
230.5
Source(s): ARI, Statistical Profile of the Air-Conditioning, Refrigeration, and Heating Industry (from U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics), April 2001, Table 3, p. 10, Table 4, p. 11, Table 5, p. 13, Table 6, p. 14, and Table 8, p. 16 for 1980 to 1990 data; ARI, Statistical Profile of the Air-Conditioning, Refrigeration and Heating Industry, October 2004, Table 3, p. 9, Table 4, p. 10, Table 5, p. 12, Table 6, p. 13 and Table 8, p. 15 for 1995 to 2003 data.
1-17
October 2009
Buildings % Buildings % of Total U.S. of Total Global 33% 8.5% 35% 8.2% 38% 9.2% 38% 7.9% 39% 7.5% 39% 7.2% 41% 7.0% 42% 6.9% 43% 6.9%
1) Excludes emissions of buildings-related energy consumption in the industrial sector. Emissions assume complete combustion from energy consumption and exclude energy production activities such as gas flaring, coal mining, and cement production. 2) Carbon emissions calculated from EIA, Assumptions to the AEO 2008 and differs from EIA, AEO 2008, Table A18. Buildings sector total varies by 0.7% for year 2006 from EIA, AEO 2008. 3) U.S. buildings emissions approximately equal the combined carbon emissions of Japan, France, and the United Kingdom.
Gases in the U.S. 2003, Dec. 2004, Tables 7-11, p. 29-31 for 1990 and 2000; EIA, Assumptions to the Annual Energy Outlook 2008, April 2008, Table 2, p. 10 for carbon coefficients; EIA, AEO 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 137-139 for 2005-2030 energy consumption and Table A18, p. 164 for 2005-2030 emissions; EIA, International Energy Outlook 2008, June 2008, Table A10, p. 93 for 2005-2030 global emissions; and EIA, International Energy Annual 2006, July 2006, Table H1, www.eia.doe.gov for 1980-2000 global emission.
Source(s): EIA, Emissions of Greenhouse Gases in the U.S. 1985-1990, Sept. 1993, Appendix B, Tables B1-B5, p. 73-74 for 1980; EIA, Emissions of Greenhouse
2000
Site Fossil
1500
Electricity
Buildings Total
1000
500
0 1980
1985
1990
1995
2000
2005
2010
2015
2020
2025
2030
Year
1-18
October 2009
2006 Buildings Energy End-Use Carbon Dioxide Emissions Splits, by Fuel Type (Million Metric Tons) (1) Natural Gas 228.7 1.1 86.4 Petroleum Distil. Resid. LPG Oth(2) Total 53.1 8.9 14.4 6.6 83.0
Space Heating (4) Lighting Space Cooling Water Heating Refrigeration (5) Electronics (6) Cooking Ventilation (7) Wet Clean (8) Computers Other (9) Adjust to SEDS (10) Total
Note(s):
Coal 8.9
11.1
3.5
14.6
2.0
2.0
3.5 10.1
8.9
Electricity (3) 99.6 405.6 288.9 109.0 132.0 179.3 50.2 64.9 72.2 52.8 153.5 90.2 1,698.0
Total 420.2 405.6 290.0 210.0 132.0 179.3 76.0 64.9 76.1 52.8 187.5 142.0 2,236.3
Percent 18.8% 18.1% 13.0% 9.4% 5.9% 8.0% 3.4% 2.9% 3.4% 2.4% 8.4% 6.4% 100%
1) Emissions assume complete combustion from energy consumption, excluding gas flaring, coal mining, and cement production. Emissions exclude wood since it is assumed that the carbon released from combustion is reabsorbed in a future carbon cycle. Carbon emissions calculated from EIA, Assumptions to the AEO 2008 and differs from EIA, AEO 2008, Table A18. Buildings sector total varies by 0.7% from EIA, AEO 2008. 2) Includes kerosene space heating (5.4 MMT) and motor gasoline other uses (3.5 MMT). 3) Excludes electric imports by utilities. 4) Includes residential furnace fans (10.1 MMT). 5) Includes refrigerators (116.5 MMT) and freezers (15.6 MMT). 6) Includes color television (62.2 MMT) and other office equipment. 7) Commercial only; residential fan and pump energy use included proportionately in space heating and cooling. 8) Includes clothes washers (6.7 MMT), natural gas clothes dryers (3.9 MMT), electric clothes dryers (47.7 MMT), and dishwashers (17.9 MMT). Does not include water heating energy. 9) Includes residential small electric devices, heating elements, motors, swimming pool heaters, hot tub heaters, outdoor grills, and natural gas outdoor lighting. Includes commercial service station equipment, ATMs, telecommunications equipment, medical equipment, pumps, emergency electric generators, and manufacturing performed in commercial buildings. 10) Emissions related to a discrepancy between data sources. Energy attributable to the buildings sector, but not directly to specific end-uses.
and Table A18, p. 143-144 for emissions; EIA, National Energy Modeling System for AEO 2008, Mar. 2008; EIA, Assumptions to the AEO 2008, April 2008, Table 2, p. 10 for emission coefficients; BTS/A.D. Little, Electricity Consumption by Small End-Uses in Residential Buildings, Aug. 1998, Appendix A for residential electric end-uses; BTS/A.D. Little, Energy Consumption Characteristics of Commercial Building HVAC Systems, Volume II: Thermal Distribution, Auxiliary Equipment, and Ventilation, Oct. 1999, p. 1-2; BTP/Navigant Consulting, U.S. Lighting Market Characterization, Volume I, Sept. 2002, Table 8-2, p.63; and EIA, AEO 1999, Dec. 1998, Table A4, p. 118-119 and Table A5, p. 120-121 for 1996 data.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119, Table A4, p. 132-133 and Table A5, p. 134-135 for energy consumption,
2006 Buildings Energy End-Use Carbon Dioxide Emissions (Million Metric Tons)
Other , 187.5 Computers, 52.8 Adjust to SEDS , 142.0 Space Heating , 420.2
Wet Clean , 76.1 Ventilation , 64.9 Cooking, 76.0 Lighting, 405.6 Electronics, 179.3
1-19
October 2009
2010 Buildings Energy End-Use Carbon Dioxide Emissions Splits, by Fuel Type (Million Metric Tons) (1) Natural Gas 258.1 1.1 86.0 Petroleum Distil. Resid. LPG Oth(2) Total 57.9 7.7 15.1 7.1 87.7
Space Heating (4) Lighting Space Cooling Water Heating Electronics (5) Refrigeration (6) Wet Clean (7) Computers Cooking Ventilation (8) Other (9) Adjust to SEDS (10) Total
Note(s):
Coal 8.8
10.0
3.1
13.2
3.9 24.9 15.3 34.9 424.2 1.3 13.5 82.8 2.0 15.6 7.7 35.8 3.5 10.6 2.0 20.4 13.5 136.8
8.8
Electricity (3) 92.3 336.1 235.2 98.1 172.3 124.6 69.4 63.9 26.7 34.6 369.4 145.4 1,768.0
Total 446.8 336.1 236.3 197.2 172.3 124.6 73.3 63.9 53.6 34.6 405.1 193.9 2,337.8
Percent 19.1% 14.4% 10.1% 8.4% 7.4% 5.3% 3.1% 2.7% 2.3% 1.5% 17.3% 8.3% 100%
1) Emissions assume complete combustion from energy consumption, excluding gas flaring, coal mining, and cement production. Emissions exclude wood since it is assumed that the carbon released from combustion is reabsorbed in a future carbon cycle. 2) Includes kerosene space heating (7.7 MMT) and motor gasoline other uses (3.5 MMT). 3) Excludes electric imports by utilities. 4) Includes residential furnace fans (11.6 MMT). 6) Includes color television (71.7 MMT) and other office equipment (100.6 MMT). 5) Includes refrigerators (109.8 MMT) and freezers (14.8 MMT). 8) Includes clothes washers (6.0 MMT), natural gas clothes dryers (3.9 MMT), electric clothes dryers (46.5 MMT), and dishwashers (16.9 MMT). Does not include water heating energy. 7) Commercial only; residential fan and pump energy use included proportionately in space heating and cooling. 9) Includes residential small electric devices, heating elements, motors, swimming pool heaters, hot tub heaters, outdoor grills, and natural gas outdoor lighting. Includes commercial service station equipment, ATMs, telecommunications equipment, medical equipment, pumps, emergency electric generators, and manufacturing performed in commercial buildings. 10) Emissions related to a discrepancy between data sources. Energy attributable to the buildings sector, but not directly to specific end-uses.
and Table A18, p. 143-144 for emissions; EIA, National Energy Modeling System for AEO 2008, Feb. 2008; EIA, Assumptions to the AEO 2008, April 2008, Table 2, p. 10 for emission coefficients.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119, Table A4, p. 122-123 and Table A5, p. 134-135 for energy consumption,
2010 Buildings Energy End-Use Carbon Dioxide Emissions Splits (Million Metric Tons)
Ventilation , 34.6 Cooking, 53.6 Computers, 63.9 Wet Clean , 73.3 Refrigeration , 124.6 Electronics, 172.3 Water Heating, 197.2
Lighting, 336.1
1-20
October 2009
2020 Buildings Energy End-Use Carbon Dioxide Emissions Splits, by Fuel Type (Million Metric Tons) (1) Natural Gas 277.4 1.1 95.6 9.6 2.9 12.6 Petroleum Distil. Resid. LPG Oth(2) Total 58.2 8.1 14.9 7.4 88.6
Space Heating (4) Lighting Space Cooling Electronics (5) Water Heating Refrigeration (6) Computers Wet Clean (7) Cooking Ventilation (8) Other (9) Adjust to SEDS (10) Total
Note(s):
Coal 8.7
8.7
Electricity (3) 97.6 311.9 263.1 220.3 105.4 128.6 76.2 71.0 29.3 37.7 473.2 159.3 1,973.7
Total 472.3 311.9 264.2 220.3 213.5 128.6 76.2 75.2 60.0 37.7 517.2 211.9 2,589.2
Percent 18.2% 12.0% 10.2% 8.5% 8.2% 5.0% 2.9% 2.9% 2.3% 1.5% 20.0% 8.2% 100%
1) Emissions assume complete combustion from energy consumption, excluding gas flaring, coal mining, and cement production. Emissions exclude wood since it is assumed that the carbon released from combustion is reabsorbed in a future carbon cycle. 2) Includes kerosene space heating (7.4 MMT) and motor gasoline other uses (3.7 MMT). 3) Excludes electric imports by utilities. 4) Includes residential furnace fans (13.2 MMT). 5) Includes color television (77.3 MMT) and other office equipment (143.2 MMT). 6) Includes refrigerators (112.1 MMT) and freezers (16.6 MMT). 7) Includes clothes washers (4.8 MMT), natural gas clothes dryers (4.2 MMT), electric clothes dryers (48.9 MMT), and dishwashers (17.3 MMT). Does not include water heating energy. 8) Commercial only; residential fan and pump energy use included proportionately in space heating and cooling. 9) Includes residential small electric devices, heating elements, motors, swimming pool heaters, hot tub heaters, outdoor grills, and natural gas outdoor lighting. Includes commercial service station equipment, ATMs, telecommunications equipment, medical equipment, pumps, emergency electric generators, and manufacturing performed in commercial buildings. 10) Emissions related to a discrepancy between data sources. Energy attributable to the buildings sector, but not directly to specific end-uses.
and Table A18, p. 143-144 for emissions; EIA, National Energy Modeling System for AEO 2008, Feb. 2008; EIA, Assumptions to the AEO 2008, April 2008, Table 2, p. 10 for emission coefficients;
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119, Table A4, p. 122-123 and Table A5, p. 134-135 for energy consumption,
2020 Buildings Energy End-Use Carbon Dioxide Emissions Splits (Million Metric Tons)
Other , 517.2
Lighting, 311.9
Ventilation , 37.7
Electronics , 220.3
1-21
October 2009
2030 Buildings Energy End-Use Carbon Dioxide Emissions Splits, by Fuel Type (Million Metric Tons) (1) Natural Gas 281.2 1.1 96.8 8.7 2.7 11.3 Petroleum Distil. Resid. LPG Oth(2) Total 53.8 8.1 14.5 7.4 83.9
Space Heating (4) Lighting Space Cooling Electronics (5) Water Heating Refrigeration (6) Computers Wet Clean (7) Cooking Ventilation (8) Other (9) Adjust to SEDS (10) Total
Note(s):
Coal 8.6
8.6
Electricity (3) 102.6 336.3 303.3 269.6 108.5 143.7 93.7 78.7 32.1 42.4 605.5 179.0 2,295.4
Total 476.3 336.3 304.4 269.6 216.6 143.7 93.7 83.1 65.4 42.4 665.0 228.6 2,925.1
Percent 16.3% 11.5% 10.4% 9.2% 7.4% 4.9% 3.2% 2.8% 2.2% 1.4% 22.7% 7.8% 100%
1) Emissions assume complete combustion from energy consumption, excluding gas flaring, coal mining, and cement production. Emissions exclude wood since it is assumed that the carbon released from combustion is reabsorbed in a future carbon cycle. 2) Includes kerosene space heating (7.4 MMT) and motor gasoline other uses (3.8 MMT). 3) Excludes electric imports by utilities. 4) Includes residential furnace fans (14.6 MMT). 5) Includes color television (101.5 MMT) and other office equipment (168.2 MMT). 6) Includes refrigerators (123.2 MMT) and freezers (20.5 MMT). 7) Includes clothes washers (5.0 MMT), natural gas clothes dryers (4.4 MMT), electric clothes dryers (54.2 MMT), and dishwashers (19.5 MMT). Does not include water heating energy. 8) Commercial only; residential fan and pump energy use included proportionately in space heating and cooling. 9) Includes residential small electric devices, heating elements, motors, swimming pool heaters, hot tub heaters, outdoor grills, and natural gas outdoor lighting. Includes commercial service station equipment, ATMs, telecommunications equipment, medical equipment, pumps, emergency electric generators, and manufacturing performed in commercial buildings. 10) Emissions related to a discrepancy between data sources. Energy attributable to the buildings sector, but not directly to specific end-uses.
and Table A18, p. 143-144 for emissions; EIA, National Energy Modeling System for AEO 2008, Feb. 2008; EIA, Assumptions to the AEO 2008, April 2008, Table 2, p. 10 for emission coefficients;
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119, Table A4, p. 122-123 and Table A5, p. 134-135 for energy consumption,
2030 Buildings Energy End-Use Carbon Dioxide Emissions Splits (Million Metric Tons)
Ventilation , 42.4
Cooking, 65.4 Wet Clean , 83.1
Electronics, 269.6
1-22
October 2009
Nation/Region United States China OECD Europe Russia Other Non-OECD Asia Middle East Japan Other Non-OECD Eurasia India Central and S. America Africa Canada South Korea Australia and New Zealand Mexico Total World
1990 4989 2241 4092 2334 807 704 1011 1859 578 673 649 474 234 291 300 21223
Source(s): EIA, International Energy Outlook 2008, June 2008, Table A10, p. 93.
1.4.7
2006 Methane Emissions for U.S. Buildings Energy Production, by Fuel Type (MMT CO2 Equvalant) (1) Residential 1.0 30.8 0.0 2.3 38.2 72.3 Commercial 0.5 20.0 0.2 0.4 36.7 57.9 Buildings Total 1.4 50.9 0.3 2.7 74.9 130.1
Fuel Type Petroleum Natural Gas Coal Wood Electricity (2) Total
Note(s):
1) Sources of emissions include oil and gas production, processing, and distribution; coal mining; and utility and site combustion. Carbon Dioxide equivalent units are calculated by converting methane emissions to carbon dioxide emissions (methane's global warming potential is 23 times that of carbon dioxide). 2) Emissions of electricity generators attributable to the buildings sector.
U.S. Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Sinks: 1990-2006, April 2008, Table 3-16, p. 3-25 for stationary combustion emissions; and EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119 for energy consumption.
Source(s): EIA, Emissions of Greenhouse Gases in the U.S. 2006, Nov. 2007, Table 15, p. 22 for energy production emissions; EPA, Inventory of
1-23
October 2009
95.35
53.06
53.06
53.06
69.30
72.70
57.75 117.8
57.25 110.5
58.34 126.6
1) Emissions assume complete combustion from energy consumption, excluding gas flaring, coal mining, and cement production. The combustion of fossil fuels produces carbon in the form of carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide; however, carbon monoxide emissions oxidize in a relatively short time to form carbon dioxide. 2) Coefficients do not match total emissions reported in the AEO 2008 and were adjusted using Assumptions to the AEO 2008. 3) Excludes electricity imports from utility consumption. Includes nuclear and renewable (including hydroelectric) generated electricity. 4) Use this coefficient to estimate CO2 emissions resulting from the consumption of energy by electric generators. 5) Use this coefficient to estimate CO2 emissions resulting from the consumption of electricity by end-users. 6) Use this coefficient to estimate emissions of the next-built (2006) natural gas-fired, electric generator resulting from the consumption of electricity by end-users. 7) Use this coefficient to estimate emissions of existing natural gas-fired, electric generators resulting from the consumption of electricity by end-users.
p. 145 for emissions; EIA, Assumptions to the AEO 2008, June 2008, Table 2, p. 10 for coefficients and Table 38, p. 76 for generator efficiencies; EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Diagram 5, p. 221 for Transmission and Distribution (T&D) losses.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119, Table A8, p. 131-132, Table A17, p. 143-144 for consumption and Table A18,
1-24
October 2009
Average Carbon Dioxide Emissions from a Generic Quad in the Buildings Sector with Stock Fuel Mix and Projected Fuel Mix of New Marginal Utility Capacity and Site Energy Consumption (Million Metric Tons) (1) Stock 2006 Resid. Comm. 41.59 46.48 4.15 2.75 11.47 8.65 0.00 0.00 0.04 0.45 57.25 58.34 Projected Fuel Mix of New Marginal Utility Capacity and Site Consumption 2010 2020 2030 Resid. Comm. Bldgs. Resid. Comm. Bldgs. Resid. Comm. Bldgs. 29.52 40.01 33.52 37.20 47.26 43.36 56.59 55.35 55.82 3.31 0.55 2.26 2.26 0.21 1.00 1.41 0.17 0.64 16.51 7.42 13.04 16.48 7.10 10.73 10.24 6.46 7.88 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.04 0.00 0.03 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 49.39 47.98 48.85 55.93 54.58 55.10 68.24 61.98 64.34
Electricity (2) Petroleum Natural Gas Renew. En. (3) Coal Total
Note(s):
| | | | | | |
1) This table provides estimates of the carbon emissions resulting from consumption of a generic quad in the buildings sector, at current and projected fuel shares. Projected increases in site energy will be primarily met by electricity and natural gas. Projected new marginal emissions will result from natural gas- and coal-fired power plants. Electricity imports from utility consumption were not included since this energy was produced outside of the U.S. "Average" means the weighted average of different fuels (e.g., petroleum is the average of residual and distillate fuel oils, LPG, kerosene, and motor gasoline). The combustion of fossil fuels produces carbon in the form of carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide; however, carbon monoxide emissions oxidize in a relatively short time to form carbon dioxide. 2) Includes renewables. 3) Emissions exclude wood since it is assumed that the carbon released from combustion is reabsorbed in a future carbon cycle.
carbon emissions; and EIA, Assumptions to the AEO 2008, June 2008, Table 2, p. 9.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119 and Table A17, p. 143 for energy consumption and Table A18, p. 144 for
1.4.10
2006 EPA Emissions Summary Table for U.S. Buildings Energy Consumption (Thousand Short Tons) (1) Buildings Electricity 6,964 (2) 2,597 490 37 362 448 Buildings Percent of U.S. Total 55% 18% 4% 8% 16% 5%
1) VOCs = volatile organic compounds; PM-10 = particulate matter less than 10 micrometers in aerodynamic diameter. PM-2.5 = particulate matter less than 2.5 micrometers in aerodynamic diameter. CO and VOCs site fossil emissions mostly from wood burning. 2) Emissions of SO2 are 28% lower for 2002 than 1994 estimates since Phase II of the 1990 Clean Air Act Amendments began in 2000. Buildings Energy Consumption related to SO2 emissions dropped 27% from 1994 to 2002.
All Criteria Pollutants, July 2007.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 140-142; and EPA, 1970-2006 National Emissions Inventory, Average Annual Emissions,
1.4.11
2006 EPA Criteria Pollutant Emissions Coefficients (Million Short Tons/Delivered Quadrillion Btu, unless otherwise noted)
All Buildings Electricity (1) 0.770 0.287 0.054 Site Fossil Fuel (2) 0.056 0.073 0.329 | | | | Electricity (per primary quad) (1) 0.242 0.090 0.017
SO2 NOx CO
Note(s):
1) Emissions of SO2 are 28% lower for 2002 than 1994 estimates since Phase II of the 1990 Clean Air Act Amendments began in 2000. Buildings energy consumption related SO2 emissions dropped 27% from 1994 to 2002. 2) Includes natural gas, petroleum liquid fuels, coal, and wood.
Source(s): EPA, 2006 Average Annual Emissions, All Criteria Pollutants, July 2007; and EIA, AEO 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 140-142 for energy consumption.
1-25
October 2009
Two to seven tons of waste (a rough average of 4 pounds of waste per square foot) are generated during the construction of a new single-family detached house. 15 to 70 pounds of hazardous waste are generated during the construction of a detached, single-family house. Hazardous wastes include paint, caulk, roofing cement, aerosols, solvents, adhesives, oils, and greases. Each year, U.S. builders produce between 30 and 35 million tons of construction, renovation, and demolition (C&D) waste. Annual C&D debris accounts for roughly 24% of the municipal solid waste stream. Wastes include wood (27% of total) and other (73% of total, including cardboard and paper; drywall/plaster; insulation; siding; roofing; metal; concrete, asphalt, masonry, bricks, and dirt rubble; waterproofing materials; and landscaping material). As much as 95% of buildings-related construction waste is recyclable, and most materials are clean and unmixed.
Source(s): First International Sustainable Construction Conference Proceedings, Construction Waste Management and Recycling Strategies in the U.S., Nov. 1994, p. 689; Fine Homebuilding, Construction Waste, Feb./Mar. 1995, p. 70-75; NAHB, Housing Economics, Mar. 1995, p. 12-13; and Cost Engineering, Cost-Effective Waste Minimization for Construction Managers, Vol. 37/No. 1, Jan. 1995, p. 31-39.
1.4.13
"Typical" Construction Waste Estimated for a 2,000-Square-Foot Home (1) Weight (pounds) 1,600 20% 1,400 18% 2,000 25% 600 8% 150 2% 150 2% 1,000 13% 50 1% 1,050 13% 8,000 100% Volume (cu. yd.) (2) 6 5 6 20 1 1 1 11 50
Material Solid Sawn Wood Engineered Wood Drywall Cardboard (OCC) Metals Vinyl (PVC) (3) Masonry (4) Hazardous Materials Other Total (5)
Note(s):
1) See Table 2.2.7 for materials used in the construction of a new single-family home. 2) Volumes are highly variable due to compressibility and captured air space in waste materials. 3) Assuming 3 sides of exterior clad in vinyl siding. 4) Assuming a brick veneer on home's front facade. 5) Due to rounding, sum does not add up to total.
Source(s): NAHB's Internet web site, www.nahb.org, Residential Construction Waste: From Disposal to Management, Oct. 1996.
1.4.14
1996 Construction and Demolition Debris Generated from Construction Activities and Debris Generation Rates Debris (million tons) Residential Commercial Buildings 6.6 4.3 10.8 19.7 45.1 64.8 31.9 28.0 59.9 58.2 77.4 135.5 | | | | | | Debris Generation Rates (lbs/ sq. ft.) Residential Commercial 4.38 3.89 115 155 N.A. N.A.
Source(s): EPA/OSW, Characterization of Buildings-Related Construction and Demolition Debris in the United States, June 1998, Tables 3-6, p. 2-3 - 2-8, and Table 8, p. 2-11.
1-26
Buildings Energy Data Book: 1.5 Generic Fuel Quad and Comparison
1.5.1 Key Definitions
October 2009
Quad: Quadrillion Btu (10^15 or 1,000,000,000,000,000 Btu) Generic Quad for the Buildings Sector: One quad of primary energy consumed in the buildings sector (includes the residential and commercial sectors), apportioned between the various primary fuels used in the sector according to their relative consumption in a given year. To obtain this value, electricity is converted into its primary energy forms according to relative fuel contributions (or shares) used to produce electricity in the given year. Electric Quad (Generic Quad for the Electric Utility Sector): One quad of primary energy consumed at electric utility power plants to supply electricity to end-users, shared among various fuels according to their relative contribution in a given year. (Note: The consumption of an electric quad results in the delivery of just under 1/3 the electric quad due to generation and transmission losses.) Primary Energy: The total energy consumed by an end-user, including the energy used in the generation and transmission of electricity. Also referred to as "source" energy. Delivered Energy: The energy consumed by an end-user on site, not including electricity generation and transmission losses. 1.5.2 Consumption Comparisons in 2005
One quad equals: 49 million short tons of coal = enough coal to fill a train of railroad cars 4,072 miles long (about one and a half times across the U.S.) 971 billion cubic feet natural gas 8 billion gallons of gasoline = 21 days of U.S. gasoline use = 20.1 million passenger cars each driven 12,500 miles = 17.2 million light-duty vehicles each driven 12,200 miles = all new passenger cars and light-duty trucks sold, each driven 13,000 miles = 13.1 million stock passenger cars, each driven 11,500 miles = 10% of all passenger cars, each driven 11,500 miles = all new passenger cars each making 6 round-trips from New York to Los Angeles 172 million barrels of crude oil = 14.26 days of U.S. imports = 167 days of oil flow in the Alaska pipeline at full capacity = the amount of crude oil transported by 484 supertankers 19 hours of world energy use the electricity delivered from 235 coal-fired power plants (200-MW each) in one year the electricity delivered from 37 nuclear power plants (1000-MW each) in one year average annual per capita consumption of 2.95 million people in the U.S. the approximate annual primary consumption of any one of the following states: Arkansas, Connecticut, Iowa, Kansas, Mississippi, Oregon, or West Virginia
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119, Table A7, p. 129-130, Table A8, p. 131-132, Table A9, p. 133-134, Table A11, p. 136-137 for consumption, Table G1, p. 215 for heat rates; EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Consumption, Feb. 2008, Table S3, p. 5, Table R1, p. 13, and Table R2, p. 14; EIA, Electric Power Annual 2006, September 2007, Table 2.2, p. 19; EIA, International Energy Outlook 2008, June 2008, Table A1, p. 83; DOC, Statistical Abstract of the United States 2008, May 2008, No. 1031, p. 658, No. 1074, p. 686, and No. 1080, p. 690; and Newport News Shipbuilding Web site.
1-27
Buildings Energy Data Book: 1.5 Generic Fuel Quad and Comparison
1.5.3 Carbon Emission Comparisons
October 2009
One million metric ton of carbon dioxide-equivalent emissions equals: the combustion of 518 thousand short tons of coal the coal input to 1 coal plant (200-MW) in ten and a half months the combustion of 18 billion cubic feet of natural gas the combustion of 116 million gallons of gasoline = the combustion of gasoline for 7 hours in the U.S. = 0.28 million new cars, each driven 12,500 miles = 243 thousand new light-duty vehicles, each driven 12,200 miles = 237 thousand new light trucks, each driven 11,000 miles = 0.13 million new passenger cars, each making 5 round trips from New York to Los Angeles the combustion of 188 million gallons of LPG the combustion of 107 million gallons of kerosene the combustion of 101 million gallons of distillate fuel the combustion of 87 million gallons of residual fuel 19 minutes of world energy emissions 90 minutes of U.S energy emissions 3.9 hours of U.S. buildings energy emissions 7 hours of U.S. residential energy emissions 8 hours of U.S. commercial energy emissions 1 day of U.S. buildings lighting energy emissions average annual per capita emissions of 181,000 people in the U.S.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119, Table A7, p. 129-130 for consumption, Table A18, p. 147 for emissions, and Table G1, p. 215 for heat rates; EIA, Electric Power Annual 2006, September 2007, Table 2.2, page 19; EIA, International Energy Outlook 2008, June 2008, Table A10, p. 93; EIA, Assumptions to the AEO 2008, June 2008, Table 2, p. 9 for carbon coefficients; and DOC, Statistical Abstract of the United States 2008, Jan. 2008, No. 2, p. 8 and No. 1084, p. 715.
1.5.4
Average Annual Carbon Dioxide Emissions for Various Functions Annual Unit Energy Consumption 1,249 kWh - Electricity 2,549 kWh - Electricity 20 million Btu - Natural Gas 28 million Btu - Fuel Oil 107 76 41 78 2,125 1,376 60,152 million Btu million Btu million Btu million Btu million Btu million Btu million Btu Carbon Emissions (MMT CO2) (lb CO2) 0.80 1,800 1.64 3,600 1.05 2,300 2.07 4,500 11.86 8.39 4.53 8.63 269 174 7,617 26,100 18,500 10,000 19,000 593,300 384,200 16,794,600
Stock Refrigerator Stock Electric Water Heater Stock Gas Water Heater Stock Oil Water Heater Single-Family Home Mobile Home Multi-Family Unit in Large Building Multi-Family Unit in Small Building School Building Office Building Hospital, In-Patient Stock Vehicles Passenger Car Van, Pickup Truck, or SUV Heavy Truck Tractor Trailer Truck
gallons - Gasoline gallons - Gasoline gallons - Diesel Fuel gallons - Diesel Fuel
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119 for consumption and Table A18, p. 144 for emissions, and Table G1, p. 215 for gasoline heat rate; EIA, A Look at Residential Energy Consumption in 2001, May 2004, Table CE4-1c for water heater energy consumption, Table HC5-1a for refrigerators and Table CE5-1c for refrigerator energy, and Table CE1-4c for household consumption; EIA, 2003 Commercial Buildings Energy Consumption Survey, June 2006, Table C3, p. 247 for commercial buildings; ORNL, Transportation Energy Data Book: Edition 26, 2007, Table 4.1, p. 4-2, Table 4.2, p. 4-3, Table 5.1, p. 5-2 and Table 5.2, p. 5-3 for vehicles; and EIA, Assumptions to the AEO 2008, June 2008, Table 2, p. 9 for carbon coefficients.
1-28
Buildings Energy Data Book: 1.5 Generic Fuel Quad and Comparison
1.5.5 Cost of a Generic Quad Used in the Buildings Sector ($2006 Billion) (1)
October 2009
Residential 9.88 9.57 9.06 10.04 9.90 9.09 9.17 9.37 9.76
Commercial 9.56 8.52 7.70 9.59 9.56 8.78 8.85 9.01 9.36
Buildings 9.75 9.11 8.44 9.83 9.75 8.94 9.02 9.19 9.56
1) See Table 1.5.1 for generic quad definition. This table provides the consumer cost of a generic quad in the buildings sector. Use this table to estimate the average consumer cost savings resulting from the savings of a generic (primary) quad in the buildings sector.
prices(2006-2030). EIA, State Energy Data Report 2005, Feb. 2008, Tables 8-12 pages 22-24 and EIA, State Energy Prices and Expenditures 2005 Feb. 2008 Tables 2 and 3(1980-2005)
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119 and Table A17, p. 143-144 for energy consumption and Table A3, p. 120-121 for energy
1.5.6
Shares of U.S. Buildings Generic Quad (Percent) (1) Renewables Hydro. Other Total 7% 4% 11% 7% 4% 11% 5% 3% 8% 5% 3% 9% 5% 4% 10% 5% 5% 10% 5% 6% 11% 5% 6% 11% 5% 6% 11%
Natural Gas 40% 32% 33% 31% 32% 31% 29% 28% 26%
Petroleum 12% 8% 6% 6% 6% 6% 5% 5% 5%
Coal 30% 36% 38% 39% 38% 38% 39% 41% 43%
Total 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100%
1) See Table 1.5.1 for generic quad definition. 2) The total 2006 Buildings sector primary energy consumption was 38.77 quads.
Feb. 2008, table 8 and 9, pages 22-24
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119 and Table A17, p. 143-144 for energy consumption and EIA, State Energy Data Report,
1-29
October 2009
Embodied energy is defined as the energy used during the entire life cycle of a product including the energy used for manufacturing, transporting, and disposing of the product. For example, the embodied energy in dimensional lumber includes the energy used to grow, harvest and process the trees into boards, transport the lumber to its final destination, and ultimately dispose of the wood at the end of its useful life. Embodied energy, also called life cycle assessment (LCA), is a useful tool for evaluating the relative environmental impact of various building materials because it takes production, transportation and disposal into account, all things that can have a pronounced environmental impact but are not necessarily reflected in the price.
Due to the complexity of calculations and the wide range of production methods, transportation distances and other variables for some building products, exact figures for embodied energy vary from study to study. Fortunately, precise figures are not necessary. Builders, designers, purchasers and others can make informed decisions based on the embodied energy of a given product relative to its substitutes. It should be noted that when considering the embodied energy of an entire building, the energy embodied in the building materials is small relative to the energy it takes to operate that building over its lifetime. Looking at the embodied energy of a typical home, for example, only 15 percent of that energy is embodied in the materials used to make the home; the other 85 percent is in the operation of the home over its lifetime(1) . Thus, building for efficiency is the best way to lower the embodied energy of a building.
1) Life-Cycle Environmental Performance of Renewable Building Materials. B. Lippke et. al. June, 2004 Journal of Forest Products.
1.6.1
Embodied Energy of Windows in the U.S. Embodied Energy (MMBtu/SF) (1) 0.59 0.37 0.33 0.49 0.27 CO2 Equivalent Emissions (lbs/SF) 71.24 62.15 51.83 82.31 61.6
Window Type Aluminium PVC-clad Wood Wood Vinyl (PVC) Curtainwall Viewable Glazing Curtainwall Opaque glazing (with insulated backpan) Spandrel panel (with insulated backpan)
0.18 0.1
32.16 9.53
Note(s):
1) Embodied Energy: Energy use includes extraction, processing, transportation, construction, and disposal of each material. Assumptions: Assumes a Low rise building. Values are general estimations for the U.S. 60 year building lifetime. Low-e glass.
Source(s): Athena Institute. Athena EcoCalculator for Assemblies v.2.3. 2007. Available at www.athenasmi.org/tools/ecoCalculator/index.html
1-30
October 2009
Exterior Wall Type 2x6 Steel Stud Wall (3) 16" OC with brick cladding 24" OC with brick cladding 16" OC with wood cladding (pine) 24" OC with wood cladding (pine) 16" OC with steel cladding (26 ga) 2x6 Wood Stud Wall (4) 16" OC with brick cladding 16" OC with PVC cladding 24" OC with steel cladding 24" OC with stucco cladding 24" OC with wood cladding (pine) Structural Insulated Panel (SIP) (5) with Brick cladding with Steel cladding with Stucco cladding with PVC cladding with Wood cladding
R-Value
Note(s):
Assumptions: 60 year building lifetime. Low rise building. Values are general estimations for the U.S. 1) Embodied Energy: Energy use includes extraction, processing, transportation, construction, and disposal of each material. 2) Resource Use: The weight of raw materials used in extraction, processing, transportation, construction and disposal of each material. 3) Includes cladding, 1" rigid insulation sheathing, batt insulation, vapor barrier, gypsum board, and latex paint. 4) Includes cladding, wood structural panel (WSP) sheathing, batt insulation, vapor barrier, gypsum board, and latex paint. 5) Includes cladding, vapor barrier, gypsum board, and latex paint.
Source(s): Athena Institute. Athena EcoCalculator for Assemblies v.2.3. 2007. Available at www.athenasmi.org/tools/ecoCalculator/index.html
1-31
October 2009
Exterior Wall Type 8" Concrete Block with Brick cladding + rigid insulation + vapor barrier + Gypsum board + latex paint
with Stucco cladding + rigid insulation + vapor barrier + 21.67 board + latex paint gypsum 0.16 6" Cast-In-Place Concrete (3) with Brick cladding with Steel cladding with Stucco cladding
with 1" rigid insulation + 2x6 steel stud wall (24" OC) + batt insulation 9.64 8" Concrete Tilt-Up with Steel cladding (3) with Stucco cladding (3) with 2x6 steel stud wall (24" OC) + batt insulation Insulated Concrete Forms with Steel cladding + gypsum board + latex paint with PVC cladding + gypsum board + latex paint with Wood cladding + gypsum board + latex paint
Note(s):
Assumptions: 60 year building lifetime. Low rise building. Values are general estimations for the U.S. 1) Embodied Energy: Energy use includes extraction, processing, transportation, construction, and disposal of each material. 2) Resource Use: The weight of raw materials used in extraction, processing, transportation, construction and disposal of each material. 3) Includes cladding, 4" rigid insulation, vapor barrier, gypsum board, and latex paint unless otherwise described.
Source(s): Athena Institute. Athena EcoCalculator for Assemblies v.2.3. 2007. Available at www.athenasmi.org/tools/ecoCalculator/index.html
1-32
October 2009
R-Value Glulam Joist with Plank Decking (3) with EPMD membrane with PVC membrane with Modified bitumen membrane with 4-Ply built-up roofing with Steel roofing Wood I-Joist with WSP Decking (4) with PVC membrane with 4-Ply built-up roofing Solid Wood Joist with WSP Decking (4) with Modified bitumen membrane 40.56 40.56 40.56 40.89 41.17
26.38 26.71
0.11 0.75
8.70 57.52
26.38
0.10
6.77
Wood Chord / Steel Web Truss with WSP Decking (4) with Modified bitumen membrane 26.80 Wood Truss (Flat) with WSP Decking (4) with Modified bitumen membrane Wood Truss (4:12 Pitch) with WSP Decking (4) with 30-yr Fibreglass Shingles with Clay Tile
Note(s):
0.10
9.71
25.60
0.09
7.10
25.60 25.60
0.08 0.22
6.97 22.07
Assumptions: 60 year building lifetime. Low rise building. Values are general estimations for the U.S. 1) Embodied Energy: Energy use includes extraction, processing, transportation, construction, and disposal of each material. 2) Resource Use: The weight of raw materials used in extraction, processing, transportation, construction and disposal of each material. 3) Includes membrane, 8" rigid insulation, vapor barrier, and latex paint. 4) Includes membrane, 9.5" batt insulation, vapor barrier, gypsum board, and latex paint. WSP = wood structural panel.
Source(s): Athena Institute. Athena EcoCalculator for Assemblies v.2.3. 2007. Available at www.athenasmi.org/tools/ecoCalculator/index.html
1-33
October 2009
R-Value Concrete Flat Plate Slab (3) with EPDM membrane with PVC membrane with Modified bitumen membrane with 4-Ply built-up roofing with Steel Roofing Precast Double-T (3) with EPDM membrane with PVC membrane with Modified bitumen membrane with 4-Ply built-up roofing with Steel Roofing Open-Web Steel Joist (4) with Steel decking and EPDM membrane with Steel decking and modified Bitumen membrane with Steel decking and 4-ply built-up roofing with Wood decking and modified bitumen membrane with Wood decking and 4-ply built-up roofing
Note(s):
Assumptions: 60 year building lifetime. Low rise building. Values are general estimations for the U.S. 1) Embodied Energy: Energy use includes extraction, processing, transportation, construction, and disposal of each material. 2) Resource Use: The weight of raw materials used in extraction, processing, transportation, construction and disposal of each material. 3) Includes membrane, 8" rigid insulation, vapor barrier, and latex paint. 4) Includes membrane, 8" rigid insulation, vapor barrier, gypsum board, and latex paint.
Source(s): Athena Institute. Athena EcoCalculator for Assemblies v.2.3. 2007. Available at www.athenasmi.org/tools/ecoCalculator/index.html
1-34
October 2009
Interior Wall Type (3) Wood stud (16" OC) + gypsum board Wood stud (24" OC) + gypsum board Wood stud (24" OC) + 2 gypsum boards (4) Steel stud (24" OC) + 2 gypsum boards (4) 6" Concrete block + gypsum board 6" Concrete block Clay brick (4") unpainted
Note(s):
Assumptions: Values are general estimations for the U.S. 60 year building lifetime. Low rise building. 1) Embodied Energy: Energy use includes extraction, processing, transportation, construction, and disposal of each material. 2) Resource Use: The weight of raw materials used in extraction, processing, transportation, construction and disposal of each material. 3) All interior walls include latex paint on each side unless noted otherwise. 4) Rounding obscures difference in embodied energy figure: wood stud wall is 7% lower than steel stud wall.
Source(s): Athena Institute. Athena EcoCalculator for Assemblies v.2.3. 2007. Available at www.athenasmi.org/tools/ecoCalculator/index.html
1.6.7
Floor Structure with Interior Ceiling Finish of Gypsum Board, Latex Paint Embodied Energy (MMBtu/SF) (1) 0.15 0.08 0.07 0.06 0.05 0.09 0.06 0.06 CO2 Equivalent Emissions (lbs/SF) 31.98 17.73 6.41 6.49 3.72 12.67 4.35 5.01
Concrete flat plate and slab column system 25% flyash Precast double-T concrete system Glulam joist and plank decking Wood chord and steel web truss system Wood I-joist and OSB decking system Open web steel joist with steel decking system and concrete topping Wood truss and OSB decking system Open web steel joist with 3/4" OSB flooring system Floor Structure without Interior Ceiling Finish Concrete flat plate and slab column system 25% flyash Concrete hollow core slab Open web steel joist with 3/4" OSB flooring system
Note(s):
Assumptions: Values are general estimations for the U.S. 60 year building lifetime. Low rise building. 1) Embodied Energy: Energy use includes extraction, processing, transportation, construction, and disposal of each material. 2) Resource Use: The weight of raw materials used in extraction, processing, transportation, construction and disposal of each material.
Source(s): Athena Institute. Athena EcoCalculator for Assemblies v.2.3. 2007. Available at www.athenasmi.org/tools/ecoCalculator/index.html
1-35
October 2009
Column Type Concrete Concrete Hollow structural steel Hollow structural steel Glulam Glulam Steel I-beam Steel I-beam Built-up softwood Built-up softwood
Beam Type Concrete Steel I-beam Glulam Structural composite lumber Glulam Structural composite lumber Steel I-beam Structural composite lumber Glulam Structural composite lumber
Note(s):
Assumptions: Values are general estimations for the U.S. 60 year building lifetime. Low rise building. Bay size: 30 by 30 feet. Column Height: 10 feet. 1) Embodied Energy: Energy use includes extraction, processing, transportation, construction, and disposal of each material. 2) Weighted Resource Use: The weight of raw materials used in extraction, processing, transportation, construction and disposal of each material.
Source(s): Athena Institute. Athena EcoCalculator for Assemblies v.2.3. 2007. Available at www.athenasmi.org/tools/ecoCalculator/index.html
1-36
October 2009
2-37
October 2009
2-38
October 2009
Residential Primary Energy Consumption, by Year and Fuel Type (Quadrillion Btu and Percent of Total) Electricity Renewable(2) Sales Losses Total 0.85 5% 2.45 5.91 8.36 53% 0.64 4% 3.15 7.30 10.45 61% 0.49 2% 4.07 9.26 13.33 65% 0.43 2% 4.61 10.04 (3) 14.65 70% 0.46 2% 4.95 10.59 15.54 70% 0.45 2% 5.02 10.61 15.63 69% 0.45 2% 5.25 11.08 16.34 70% 0.44 2% 5.53 11.57 17.10 71% 0.44 2% 5.88 12.14 18.01 72% Growth Rate 2006-Year 1.7% 0.9% 0.8% 0.8% 0.8%
Natural Gas Petroleum (1) 4.86 31% 1.75 11% 4.52 27% 1.41 8% 5.10 25% 1.56 8% 4.50 22% 1.25 6% 4.95 22% 1.31 6% 5.16 23% 1.33 6% 5.30 23% 1.33 6% 5.35 22% 1.31 5% 5.32 21% 1.29 5%
Coal 0.03 0.03 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.01
0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0%
TOTAL (2) 15.84 100% 17.05 100% 20.49 100% 20.83 100% 22.27 100% 22.59 100% 23.43 100% 24.21 100% 25.08 100%
1) Petroleum includes distillate oil, LPG, and kerosene. 2) Includes site -marketed and non-marketed renewable energy. 3) 2006 site -to-source electricity conversion = 3.18.
p.117-119 for 2006-2030 consumption and Table A17, p. 143-144 for non-marketed renewable energy.
Source(s): EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Consumption, Feb. 2008, Tables 8-12, p. 18-22 for 1980-2000; and EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2,
2.1.2
Shares of U.S. Residential Buildings Generic Quad (Percent) (1) Renewables Hydro. Other Total 0.066 0.059 0.125 0.062 0.053 0.114 0.048 0.039 0.087 0.051 0.036 0.087 0.049 0.048 0.097 0.048 0.054 0.101 0.046 0.06 0.106 0.045 0.063 0.107 0.043 0.064 0.107
Natural Gas 0.412 0.340 0.346 0.330 0.339 0.338 0.321 0.303 0.288
Petroleum 0.117 0.085 0.079 0.071 0.069 0.068 0.066 0.063 0.061
Coal 0.281 0.335 0.351 0.364 0.355 0.357 0.366 0.383 0.403
Nuclear 0.063 0.125 0.136 0.146 0.140 0.135 0.140 0.142 0.140
Total 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100%
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119 and Table A17, p. 143-144 for energy consumption and EIA, State Energy Data Report,
2.1.3
Residential Site Renewable Energy Consumption (Quadrillion Btu) (1) Wood 0.846 0.582 0.430 0.409 0.440 0.418 0.404 0.390 0.378 Solar Thermal 0.000 0.056 0.061 0.013 0.018 0.025 0.032 0.039 0.045 Solar PV N.A. N.A. N.A. 0.000 0.001 0.001 0.002 0.003 0.007 GSHP 0.000 0.006 0.009 0.003 0.004 0.006 0.008 0.011 0.014 Total 0.846 0.644 0.500 0.426 0.463 0.450 0.446 0.443 0.444 Growth Rate 2006-Year 2.1% 0.6% 0.3% 0.2% 0.2%
1) Does not include renewable energy consumed by electric utilities (including hydroelectric).
p. 143-144 for 2006-2030.
Source(s): EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Consumption, Feb. 2008, Tables 8-12, p. 18-22 for 1980-2005; and EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A17,
2-39
October 2009
Primary Energy Consumption Total Per Household (10^15 Btu) (million Btu/Hhold) 15.84 198.8 17.05 179.7 20.50 193.9 20.83 185.2 22.27 192.0 22.59 184.1 23.43 181.4 24.21 179.3 25.08 178.4
Source(s): EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Consumption, Feb. 2008, Tables 8-12, p. 18-22 for 1980-2005; EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2,
2-40
October 2009
Space Heating (4) Space Cooling Water Heating Lighting Electronics (5) Refrigeration (6) Wet Clean (7) Cooking Computers Other (8) Adjust to SEDS (9) Total
Note(s):
| | | | | | | | | | | |
Primary Total Percent 5.51 26.4% 2.70 13.0% 2.59 12.5% 2.41 11.6% 1.69 8.1% 1.50 7.2% 1.30 6.2% 0.98 4.7% 0.21 1.0% 0.76 3.6% 1.19 5.7% 20.83 100%
1) Kerosene (0.07 quad) and coal (0.01 quad) are assumed attributable to space heating. 2) Comprised of wood space heating solar water heating (0.01 quad), geothermal space heating (less than 0.01 quad), and solar PV (less than 0.01 quad). 3) Site -to-source electricity conversion (due to generation and transmission losses) = 3.18. 4) Includes furnace fans (0.17 quad). 5) Includes color television (1.05 quad) and other office equipment (0.64 quad). 6) Includes refrigerators (1.24 quad) and freezers (0.26 quad). 7) Includes clothes washers (0.11 quad), natural gas clothes dryers (0.07 quad), electric clothes dryers (0.81 quad), and dishwashers (0.30 quad). Does not include water heating energy. 8) Includes small electric devices, heating elements, motors, swimming pool heaters, hot tub heaters, outdoor grills, and natural gas outdoor lighting. 9) Energy adjustment EIA uses to relieve discrepancies between data sources. Energy attributable to the residential buildings sector, but not directly to specific end-uses.
Table A17, p. 143-144; and BTS/A.D. Little, Electricity Consumption by Small End-Uses in Residential Buildings, Aug. 1998, Appendix A, for residential electric end-uses.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 1999, Jan., 1999, Tables A2, p.113-114; EIA, AEO 2008, Mar. 2008, Tables A2, p. 117-119, Table A4, p. 122-123 and
2006 Residential Primary Energy End Use Computers 1.0% Cooking 4.7%
Wet Clean 6.2%
Other 3.6%
Refrigeration 7.2%
Electronics 8.1%
Lighting 11.6%
2-41
October 2009
Space Heating (4) Space Cooling Water Heating Lighting Refrigeration (5) Wet Clean (6) Electronics (7) Cooking Computers Other (8) Total
Note(s):
0.75
| | | | | | | | | | |
Primary Total Percent 6.16 27.6% 2.48 11.1% 2.45 11.0% 2.26 10.1% 1.41 6.3% 1.27 5.7% 1.23 5.5% 0.60 2.7% 0.30 1.3% 4.13 18.5% 22.27 100%
1) Kerosene (0.08 quad) and coal (0.01 quad) are assumed attributable to space heating. 2) Comprised of wood space heating (0.44 quad), solar water heating (0.02 quad), geothermal space heating (less than 0.01 quad), and solar PV (less than 0.01 quad). 3) Site -to-source electricity conversion (due to generation and transmission losses) = 3.14. 4) Includes furnace fans (0.19 quad). 5) Includes refrigerators (1.16 quad) and freezers (0.25 quad). 6) Includes clothes washers (0.10 quad), natural gas clothes dryers (0.07 quad), electric clothes dryers (0.80 quad), and dishwashers (0.29 quad). Does not include water heating energy. 7) Includes color television (1.23 quad). 8) Includes small electric devices, heating elements, motors, swimming pool heaters, hot tub heaters, outdoor grills, and natural gas outdoor lighting.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Tables A2, p. 117-119, Table A4, p. 122-123 and Table A17, p. 143-144.
2.1.7
2020 Residential Energy End-Use Splits, by Fuel Type (Quadrillion Btu) Natural Fuel Gas Oil 3.83 0.65 0.00 1.15 0.08 Other Renw. Site LPG Fuel(1) En.(2) Electric 0.24 0.09 0.41 0.40 0.91 0.05 0.03 0.42 0.51 0.46 0.43 0.39 0.03 0.12 0.12 0.20 0.00 1.49 0.52 0.09 0.45 5.25 Site Total Percent 5.61 45.5% 0.91 7.4% 1.73 14.0% 0.51 4.1% 0.46 3.7% 0.43 3.5% 0.47 3.8% 0.41 3.3% 0.12 1.0% 1.70 13.7% 12.35 100% Primary Electric (3) 1.23 2.83 1.31 1.58 1.43 1.33 1.22 0.39 0.38 4.63 16.34 Primary Total Percent 6.45 27.5% 2.83 12.1% 2.63 11.2% 1.58 6.8% 1.43 6.1% 1.33 5.7% 1.30 5.6% 0.67 2.9% 0.38 1.6% 4.84 20.7% 23.43 100%
Space Heating (4) Space Cooling Water Heating Lighting Refrigeration (5) Electronics (6) Wet Clean (7) Cooking Computers Other (8) Total
Note(s):
0.73
| | | | | | | | | | |
1) Kerosene (0.08 quad) and coal (0.01 quad) are assumed attributable to space heating. 2) Comprised of wood space heating (0.40 quad), solar water heating (0.03 quad), geothermal space heating (0.01 quad), and solar PV (less than 0.01 quad). 3) Site -to-source electricity conversion (due to generation and transmission losses) = 3.11. 4) Includes furnace fans (0.23 quad). 5) Includes refrigerators (1.14 quad) and freezers (0.29 quad). 6) Includes color television (1.33 quad). 7) Includes clothes washers (0.08 quad), natural gas clothes dryers (0.08 quad), electric clothes dryers (0.84 quad), and dishwashers (0.30 quad). Does not include water heating energy. 8) Includes small electric devices, heating elements, motors, swimming pool heaters, hot tub heaters, outdoor grills, and natural gas outdoor lighting.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Tables A2, p. 117-119, Table A4, p. 122-123 and Table A17, p. 143-144.
2-42
October 2009
Space Heating (4) Space Cooling Water Heating Electronics (5) Refrigeration (6) Lighting Wet Clean (7) Cooking Computers Other (8) Total
Note(s):
0.65
| | | | | | | | | | |
Primary Total Percent 6.44 25.7% 3.19 12.7% 2.56 10.2% 1.69 6.8% 1.54 6.1% 1.49 5.9% 1.40 5.6% 0.72 2.9% 0.48 1.9% 5.56 22.2% 25.08 100%
1) Kerosene (0.08 quad) and coal (0.01 quad) are assumed attributable to space heating. 2) Comprised of wood space heating (0.38 quad), solar water heating (0.05 quad), geothermal space heating (0.01 quad), and solar PV (0.01 quad). 3) Site -to-source electricity conversion (due to generation and transmission losses) = 3.07. 4) Includes furnace fans (0.24 quad). 5) Includes color television (1.69 quad). 6) Includes refrigerators (1.20 quad) and freezers (0.34 quad). 7) Includes clothes washers (0.08 quad), natural gas clothes dryers (0.08 quad), electric clothes dryers (0.90 quad), and dishwashers (0.33 quad). Does not include water heating energy. 8) Includes small electric devices, heating elements, motors, swimming pool heaters, hot tub heaters, outdoor grills, and natural gas outdoor lighting.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Tables A2, p. 117-119, Table A4, p. 122-123 and Table A17, p. 143-144.
2.1.9
2005 Residential Delivered Energy Consumption Intensities, by Census Region Per Square Foot (thousand Btu) 51.6 46.9 37.5 43.5 Per Household (million Btu) 120.5 113.5 80.9 77.6 Per Household Members (million Btu) 47.0 46.0 32.1 28.1 Percent of Total Consumption 23% 28% 31% 18% 100%
Source(s): EIA, A Look at Residential Energy Consumption in 2005, June and October 2008, Table US-1 part 1.
2.1.10
2005 Residential Delivered Energy Consumption Intensities, by Housing Type Per Square Foot (thousand Btu) 52.9 39.8 47.3 67.6 77.6 61.7 68.7 Per Household (million Btu) 106.6 108.3 91.7 63.7 84.5 53.8 72.7 Per Household Members (million Btu) 42.6 39.7 37.0 29.5 34.9 26.4 29.4 Percent of Total Consumption 80.5% 73.9% 6.6% 14.8% 6.3% 8.5% 4.7% 100%
Type Single-Family: Detached Attached Multi-Family: 2 to 4 units 5 or more units Mobile Homes
Source(s): EIA, A Look at Residential Energy Consumption in 2005, June and October 2008, Table HC 1-1-2, Table US-1 part1, and Table US-4.
2-43
October 2009
Space Heating Space Cooling Water Heating Refrigerator Other Appliances & Lighting Total (1)
Note(s):
Source(s): EIA, A Look at Residential Energy Consumption in 2005, October 2008, Table US-14.
2.1.12
2005 Residential Delivered Energy Consumption Intensities, by Vintage Per Square Foot (thousand Btu) 49.3 44.5 41.3 38.6 34.0 43.8 Per Household (million Btu) 104.2 82.9 82.3 96.5 96.1 95 Per Household Member (million Btu) 41.8 33.3 32.7 34.4 34.8 37.0 Percent of Total Consumption 46% 15% 14% 16% 8%
Year Prior to 1970 1970 to 1979 1980 to 1989 1990 to 1999 2000 to 2005 Average
Source(s): EIA, A Look at Residential Energy Consumption in 2005, October 2008, Table US-1 part 1.
2.1.13
1997 Residential Delivered Energy Consumption Intensities, by Ownership of Unit Per Square Foot (thousand Btu) 58.3 70.3 62.7 70.9 Per Household (million Btu) 114.7 72.5 51.0 74.8 Per Household Members (million Btu) 43.3 29.4 25.3 29.8 Percent of Total Consumption 77% 23% 2% 22% 100%
2.1.14
Aggregate Residential Building Component Loads as of 1998 (1) Loads (quads) and Percent of Total Loads Heating Cooling -0.65 12% 0.16 14% -1.00 19% 0.11 10% -0.76 15% -0.07 -1.47 28% 0.19 16% -1.34 26% 0.01 1% 0.43 0.37 32% 0.79 0.31 27% -3.99 100% 1.08 100%
Component Roof Walls Foundation Infiltration Windows (conduction) Windows (solar gain) Internal Gains Net Load
Note(s):
1) "Loads" represents the thermal energy losses/gains that when combined will be offset by a building's heating/cooling system to maintain a set interior temperature (which then equals site energy).
Source(s): LBNL, Residential Heating and Cooling Loads Component Analysis, Nov. 1998, Figure P-1, P-1 and Appendix C: Component Loads Data Tables.
2-44
October 2009
Building Type Single-Family Detached Attached Multi-Family 2 to 4 units 5 or more units Mobile Homes
Consumption (million Btu/Member) Pre-1990 1990-1997 42.6 36.8 42.9 36.8 40.7 37.3 28.8 22.4 41.3 20.1 23.7 22.8 50.5 45.2
2-45
October 2009
Power Draw (W) (1) Active Idle Off Kitchen Coffee Maker Dishwasher (3) Microwave Oven Refrigerator-Freezer Freezer Lighting 18-W Compact Fluorescent 60-W Incandescent Lamp 100-W Incandescent Lamp Torchiere Lamp-Halogen Bedroom and Bathroom Hair Dryer Waterbed Heater Laundry Room Clothes Dryer Clothes Washer (3) Home Electronics CPU & Monitor Stereo Systems Television Analog, <40" Analog, >40" Digital, ED/HD TV, <40" Digital, ED/HD TV, >40" Set-top box DVD/VCR Heating and Cooling Dehumidifier Furnace Fan Ceiling Fan (only fan motor) Water Heating Water Heater-Family of 4 Water Heater-Family of 2 Portable Spa Miscellaneous Pool Pump Well Pump Total Standby
Note(s):
Annual Consumption Annual Cost (kWh/year) ($) (2) 58 120 131 660 470 20 40 70 440 40 1,070 1,000 110 260 119 193 184 312 301 455 178 78 970 400 81 0 0 0 4,770 2,340 2,525 790 80 500 5 11 12 62 44 2 4 7 41 4 101 94 10 24 11 18 17 29 28 43 17 7 91 38 8 448 220 237 74 8 47
1,000 0 1,500
70 0 0
0 (4) 3
0 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 (4) (4)
0 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0
0 182/30 33 113 86 156 150 234 20 17 600 295 35 4,500 4,500 4,350 1,000 725 0
(3)
0 1,510 1,810 5,440 1,460 7,300 1,095 1,825 1,095 1,825 6,450 0 2,310 170 5,150 3,430 1,620 1,350 2,310 0 0
1) Power draw will vary due to appliance components and modes of operation. 2) $0.096/kWh. 3) Excludes electricity for water heating and drying. 4) Cycles/year. 5) TVs <40" are estimated on 3 hours/day and TVs >40" are estimated on 5 hours/day. 6) Gallons/day.
dehumidifier, dishwasher, furnace fan, pool pump, torchiere lamp-halogen, waterbed heater, and well pump; LBNL, Energy Data Sourcebook for the U.S. Residential Sector, LBNL-40297, Sept. 1997, p. 100-102 for clothes dryers, Table 10.2, p. 108 for lighting, and p. 62-67 for water heaters; LBNL, Miscellaneous Electricity Use in the U.S. Residential Sector, LBNL-40295, Apr. 1998, Appendix D for hair dryers; EIA, Supplement to AEO 2008, June 2008, Table 21 for refrigerator and freezer; GAMA, Consumers' Directory of Certified Efficiency Ratings for Heating and Water Heating Equipment, Apr. 2000 for water heater power draw; EIA/TIAX, Commercial and Residential Sector Miscellaneous Electricity Consumption: FY2005 and Projections to 2030, Sept. 2006, p. 41-60 for coffee maker, microwave oven, stereo systems, TVs, set-top box, DVD/VCR, ceiling fan, and portable spa; and LBNL for total standby.
Source(s): BTS/A.D. Little, Electricity Consumption by Small End Uses in Residential Buildings, Aug. 1998, Exhibit 6-8, p. 6-10 for clothes washer, computer,
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October 2009
40 40
64 32
Source(s): A.D. Little, EIA-Technology Forecast Updates - Residential and Commercial Building Technologies - Reference Case, Sept. 2, 1998, p. 30 for
2.1.18
Residential Buildings Share of U.S. Natural Gas Consumption (Percent) U.S. Natural Gas Primary Consumption Total Residential Industry Transportation (quads) 30% 49% 3% 20.38 29% 49% 3% 19.75 29% 47% 3% 23.80 31% 43% 3% 22.30 31% 43% 3% 23.93 31% 42% 3% 24.35 31% 41% 3% 24.01 31% 41% 3% 23.66 31% 41% 3% 23.39
Residential 1980 24% 1990 23% 2000 21% 2006(1) 20% 2010 21% 2015 21% 2020 22% 2025 23% 2030 23%
Note(s):
Site Consumption Industry Electric Gen. Transportation 41% 19% 3% 43% 17% 3% 40% 22% 3% 35% 29% 3% 35% 29% 3% 35% 28% 3% 35% 25% 3% 36% 23% 3% 36% 22% 3%
| | | | | | | | |
1) Buildings accounted for 58% (or $97 billion) of total U.S. natural gas expenditures.
p. 117-119 for 2006-2030 consumption, Table A3, p. 120-121 for 2006 expenditures.
Source(s): EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Consumption, Feb. 2008, Tables 8-12, p. 18-22 for 1980-2000; and EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2,
2.1.19
Residential Buildings Share of U.S. Petroleum Consumption (Percent) U.S. Petroleum Total (quads) 34.2 33.6 38.4 40.1 40.5 41.8 42.2 42.8 44.0
Residential 5% 4% 4% 3% 3% 3% 3% 3% 3%
Site Consumption Industry Electric Gen. Transportation 28% 8% 56% 25% 4% 64% 24% 3% 67% 25% 2% 69% 24% 1% 70% 23% 1% 71% 22% 1% 72% 21% 1% 73% 21% 1% 73%
| | | | | | | | |
Primary Consumption Residential Industry Transportation 8% 31% 56% 6% 26% 64% 5% 25% 67% 4% 25% 69% 4% 24% 70% 4% 23% 71% 4% 22% 72% 4% 22% 73% 3% 21% 73%
1) Buildings accounted for an estimated 7.3% (or $30 billion) of total U.S. petroleum expenditures.
p. 117-119 for 2006-2030 consumption, Table A3, p. 120-121 for 2006 expenditures.
Source(s): EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Consumption, Feb. 2008, Tables 8-12, p. 18-22 for 1980-2000; and EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2,
2-47
October 2009
Average Household Size (2) 2.9 2.6 2.7 2.7 2.7 2.6 2.6 2.6 2.6
1) Percent built after Dec. 31, 2000. 2) Number of residents. 3) Number of buildings and floorspace in 1997; for comparison, 1997 households = 101.5 million; percentage of floorspace: 85% single-family, 11% multi-family, and 4% manufactured housing. 2001 households = 107.2 million; percentage of floorspace: 83% single-family, 13% multi-family, and 4% manufactured housing.
Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A4, p. 142-143 for 2005-2030 households and Table A19, p. 165 for housing starts; EIA, Buildings and Energy in the 1980's, June 1995, Table 2.1, p. 23 for residential buildings and floorspace in 1980 and 1990; EIA, RECS 1997 for 1997 buildings and floorspace; and EIA RECS 2001 for 2001 households and floorspace.
Source(s): DOC, Statistical Abstract of the U.S. 2008, Oct. 2007, No. 948, p. 626, 1980-2000 households, No. 2-3, p. 7-8 for population; EIA, Annual Energy
2.2.2
Share of Households, by Housing Type and Type of Ownership, as of 2005 (Percent) Owned 61.5% 57.7% 3.8% 3.7% 1.6% 2.1% 5.1% 70.4% Rented 10.3% 7.2% 3.1% 18.3% 5.3% 13.0% 1.1% 29.6% Total 71.8% 65.0% 6.8% 22.0% 6.9% 15.0% 6.2% 100%
Housing Type Single-Family: Detached Attached Multi-Family: 2 to 4 units 5 or more units Mobile Homes Total
Source(s): EIA, A Look at Residential Energy Consumption in 2005, July 2008, Table HC3-1 and HC4-1.
2.2.3
Share of Households, by Census Region and Vintage, as of 2005 (Percent) Prior to 1970 11.8% 11.5% 11.0% 8.0% 1970 to 1979 2.4% 3.6% 6.4% 4.5% 1980 to 1989 2.1% 2.5% 7.6% 4.6% 1990 to 1999 1.4% 3.7% 7.5% 3.1% 2000 to 2005 0.8% 1.6% 4.3% 1.5%
Source(s): EIA, A Look at Residential Energy Consumption in 2005, July 2008, Table HC10-1.
2-48
October 2009
Floorspace Fewer than 500 500 to 999 1,000 to 1,499 1,500 to 1,999 2,000 to 2,499 2,500 to 2,999 3,000 or more Total
Source(s): EIA, A Look at Residential Energy Consumption in 2005, July 2008, Table HC1-3.
2.2.5
Vintage Before 1940 1940 to 1949 1950 to 1959 1960 to 1969 1970 to 1979 1980 to 1989 1990 to 1999 2000 to 2005 Total
Source(s): EIA, A Look at Residential Energy Consumption in 2005, July 2008, Table HC5-1.
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October 2009
Total Thousand Units 1,736 1,986 1,503 1,632 1,855 2,055 2,091
Source(s): DOC, 2007 Characteristics of New Housing, June 2008, p. 4 for single-family completions, p. 260 for single-family average SF; NAHB, Housing Economics, Mar. 1995; NAHB, Facts, Figures and Trends, 1997, Characteristics of New Multi-Family Homes, 1971-1995, p. 7; DOC, Current Construction Reports, Characteristics of New Housing, C25/98-A, Table 18, p. 44; DOC, Placements of New Manufactured Homes by Region and Size of Home, 1974-1988; and DOC, Placements of New Manufactured Homes by Region and Size of Home, 1980-2006.
2.2.7
2007 New Homes Completed/Placed, by Census Region (Thousand Units and Percent of Total Units) (1) Single-Family Units 105 9% 189 15% 632 52% 294 24% 1,219 100%
1) Preliminary.
Completed, for single- and multi-family; and DOC, Manufacturing, Mining and Construction Statistics: Manufactured Homes Placements by Region and Size of Home, Mar. 2008 for mobile home placements.
Source(s): DOC, Manufacturing, Mining and Construction Statistics: New Residential Construction: New Privately Owned Housing Units
2.2.8
2007 Construction Method of Single-Family Homes, by Region (Thousand Units and Percent of Total Units) Stick Built Units 91 0.078 173 0.148 613 0.526 288 0.247 1,165 1 Modular Units 9 29% 10 32% 8 26% 4 13% 31 100% Panelized/Precut Units 5 0.227 5 0.227 10 0.455 2 0.091 22 100% Total 105 189 631 294 1,219
Source(s): DOC, Manufacturing, Mining and Construction Statistics, New Residential Construction: Type of Construction Method of New One-Family Houses Completed, Mar. 2008.
2007 HUD-Code (Mobile) Home Placements, by Census Region and Top Five States (Percent of National Total) Top Five States Texas Florida Louisiana California Arizona
Source(s): DOC, Manufactured Housing Statistics, 2007 New Manufactured Homes Placed by Size of Home, by State, Apr. 2008.
2-50
October 2009
12 interior doors 6 closet doors 2 garage doors 1 fireplace 3 toilets, 2 bathtubs, 1 shower stall 3 bathroom sinks 15 kitchen cabinets, 5 other cabinets 1 kitchen sink 1 range, 1 refrigerator, 1 dishwasher, 1 garbage disposal, 1 range hood 1 washer, 1 dryer 1 heating and cooling system
Source(s): NAHB, 2004 Housing Facts, Figures and Trends, Feb. 2004, p. 7; D&R International for appliances and HVAC.
2.2.11
Characteristics of a Typical Single-Family Home (1) mid 1970s 3 1,934 1,495 2-Car 1 Concrete Slab 6 3 3 2 0 222 15 Double-Pane | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Building Equipment Type Space Heating Central Warm-Air Furnace Water Heating 49 Gallons Space Cooling Central Air Conditioner Fuel Natural Gas Natural Gas Age (5) 12 8 8
Year Built Occupants Floorspace Heated Floorspace (SF) Cooled Floorspace (SF) Garage Stories Foundation Total Rooms (2) Bedrooms Other Rooms Full Bathroom Half Bathroom Windows Area (3) Number (4) Type Insulation: Well or Adequate
Note(s):
Appliances Refrigerator Clothes Dryer Clothes Washer Range/Oven Microwave Oven Dishwasher Color Televisions Ceiling Fans Computer Printer
Type / Fuel / Number 2-Door Top and Bottom Electric Top-Loading Electric
Age (5) 8
3 3 2
1) This is a weighted-average house that has combined characteristics of the Nation's stock homes. Although the population of homes with similar traits may be few, these are likely to be the most common. 2) Excludes bathrooms. 3) 11.5% of floorspace. 4) Based on a nominal 3' X 5' window. 5) Years.
Source(s): EIA, 2005 Residential Energy Consumption Survey: Characteristics, April 2008, Tables HC 1.1.1, HC1.1.3, HC 2.1, HC 2.2, HC 2.3, HC 2.4, HC 2.5, HC 2.6.
2-51
October 2009
Source(s): EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Prices and Expenditures, Feb. 2008, Tables 2-3, p. 24-25 for 1980-2005 and prices for note, Tables 8-9,
2.3.2
Residential Energy Prices, by Year and Fuel Type ($2006) Electricity (/kWh) 11.55 11.18 9.59 10.41 10.70 10.25 10.30 10.35 10.45 Natural Gas (/therm) 77.68 80.38 89.00 133.99 121.52 112.02 113.94 119.35 129.12 Distillate Oil LPG ($/gal) ($/gal) 1.46 2.10 1.34 1.59 1.45 1.61 1.98 2.49 2.16 2.39 2.07 1.98 2.08 1.98 2.11 2.10 2.18 2.26
Source(s): EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Prices and Expenditures, Feb. 2008, p. Tables 2-3, p. 24-25 for 1980-2005; EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A3, p. 120-121 for 2006-2030 and Table G1, p. 215 for fuels' heat content; and EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for price deflators.
2.3.3
Residential Aggregate Energy Expenditures, by Year and Major Fuel Type ($2006 Billion) (1) Electricity 82.9 103.3 114.4 140.8 155.2 150.9 158.7 167.7 180.0 Natural Gas Petroleum (2) 37.7 27.4 36.3 17.6 45.4 21.0 60.3 24.5 60.2 26.3 57.8 23.9 60.4 24.1 63.8 24.9 68.7 26.0 Total 148.0 157.2 180.8 225.6 241.7 232.6 243.2 256.3 274.7
1) Expenditures exclude wood and coal. 2006 U.S. energy expenditures were 1.14 trillion. 2) Residential petroleum products include distillate fuel oil, LPG, and kerosene.
p. 117-119 and Table A3, p. 120-121 for 2006-2030; and EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for price deflators.
Source(s): EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Prices and Expenditures, Feb. 2008, p. 24-25 for 1980-2005; EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2,
2-52
October 2009
Cost of a Generic Quad Used in the Residential Sector ($2006 Billion) (1) 9.88 9.57 9.06 10.04 9.90 9.09 9.17 9.37 9.76
1) See Table 1.5.1 for generic quad definition. This table provides the consumer cost of a generic quad in the buildings sector. Use this table to estimate the average consumer cost savings resulting from the savings of a generic (primary) quad in the buildings sector.
prices(2006-2030). EIA, State Energy Data Report 2005, Feb. 2008, Tables 8-12 pages 22-24 and EIA, State Energy Prices and Expenditures 2005 Feb. 2008 Tables 2 and 3(1980-2005); EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for price inflators.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2007, Table A2, p. 117-119 and Table A17, p. 143-144 for energy consumption and Table A3, p. 120-121 for energy
2.3.5
2006 Residential Energy End-Use Expenditure Splits, by Fuel Type ($2006 Billion) (1) Natural Gas 41.9 14.5 0.0 Petroleum LPG Kerosene 5.3 1.1 1.3
Space Heating (2) Water Heating (3) Space Cooling (4) Lighting Refrigeration (5) Electronics (6) Wet Clean (7) Cooking Computers Other (8) Adjust to SEDS (9) Total
Note(s):
Coal 0.01
Electricity 10.1 12.9 26.0 23.2 18.4 16.3 11.7 7.0 2.0 5.8 7.4 140.8
Total 69.2 30.5 26.0 23.2 18.4 16.3 12.7 10.6 2.0 9.3 7.4 225.6
Percent 30.7% 13.5% 11.5% 10.3% 8.2% 7.2% 5.6% 4.7% 0.9% 4.1% 3.3% 100%
1) Expenditures include coal and exclude wood. 2) Includes furnace fans ($1.7 billion). 3) Includes residential recreational water heating ($1.3 billion). 4) Fan energy use included. 5) Includes refrigerators ($14.1 billion) and freezers ($4.0 billion). 6) Includes color televisions ($10.1 billion) and other electronics ($6.3 billion). 7) Includes clothes washers ($1.1 billion), natural gas clothes dryers ($1.0 billion), electric clothes dryers ($7.7 billion), and dishwashers ($2.9 billion). 8) Includes small electric devices, heating elements, motors, swimming pool heaters, hot tub heaters, outdoor grills, and natural gas outdoor lighting. 9) Expenditures related to an energy adjustment EIA uses to relieve discrepancies between data sources. Energy attributable to the residential building sector, but not directly to specific end-uses.
Data 2005: Prices and Expenditures, Feb. 2008, p. 24 for coal price; EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for price deflators; and BTS/A.D. Little, Electricity Consumption by Small End-Uses in Residential Buildings, Aug. 1998, Appendix A for residential electric end-uses.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119 and Table A4, p. 122-123 for energy, Table A3, p. 120-121 for prices; EIA, State Energy
Electronics, 16.3
Refrigeration, 18.4
Water Heating , 30.5 Lighting, 23.2 Space Cooling , 26.0
2-53
October 2009
Space Heating (2) Water Heating Space Cooling (3) Lighting Refrigeration (4) Wet Clean (5) Electronics (6) Cooking Computers Other (7) Total
Note(s):
Coal 0.0
13.0
1.3
0.0
Electricity 11.5 12.0 24.8 22.5 14.1 11.9 12.3 3.4 3.0 39.6 155.2
Total 73.6 28.0 24.8 22.5 14.1 12.8 12.3 6.9 3.0 43.7 241.7
Percent 30.4% 11.6% 10.3% 9.3% 5.8% 5.3% 5.1% 2.9% 1.2% 18.1% 100%
1) Expenditures include coal and exclude wood. 2) Includes furnace fans ($2.0 billion). 3) Fan energy use included. 4) Includes refrigerators ($11.5 billion) and freezers ($2.5 billion). 5) Includes clothes washers ($1.0 billion), natural gas clothes dryers ($0.9 billion), electric clothes dryers ($8.0 billion), and dishwashers ($2.9 billion). 6) Includes color televisions ($12.3 billion). 7) Includes small electric devices, heating elements, motors, swimming pool heaters, hot tub heaters, outdoor grills, and natural gas outdoor lighting.
Data 2005: Prices and Expenditures, Feb. 2008, p. 24 for coal price; EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for price deflators.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2007, Table A2, p. 117-119 and Table A4, p. 122-123 for energy, Table A3, p. 120-121 for prices; EIA, State Energy
2.3.7
2020 Residential Energy End-Use Expenditure Splits, by Fuel Type ($2006 Billion) (1) Natural Gas 43.6 13.1 0.0 Petroleum LPG Kerosene 5.7 1.1 1.1
Space Heating (2) Water Heating Space Cooling (3) Lighting Refrigeration (4) Electronics (5) Wet Clean (6) Cooking Computers Other (7) Total
Note(s):
Coal 0.0
10.4
1.1
0.0
Electricity 12.0 12.8 27.4 15.4 13.9 12.9 11.9 3.8 3.7 45.0 158.7
Total 71.7 28.2 27.4 15.4 13.9 12.9 12.8 7.4 3.7 49.9 243.2
Percent 29.5% 11.6% 11.3% 6.3% 5.7% 5.3% 5.3% 3.0% 1.5% 20.5% 100%
1) Expenditures include coal and exclude wood. 2) Includes furnace fans ($2.2 billion). 3) Fan energy use included. 4) Includes refrigerators ($11.1 billion) and freezers ($2.8 billion). 5) Includes color televisions ($12.9 billion). 6) Includes clothes washers ($0.8 billion), natural gas clothes dryers ($0.9 billion), electric clothes dryers ($8.2 billion), and dishwashers ($2.9 billion). 7) Includes small electric devices, heating elements, motors, swimming pool heaters, hot tub heaters, outdoor grills, and natural gas outdoor lighting.
Data 2005: Prices and Expenditures, Feb. 2008, p. 24 for coal price; EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for price deflators;
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2007, Table A2, p. 117-119 and Table A4, p. 122-123 for energy, Table A3, p. 120-121 for prices; EIA, State Energy
2-54
October 2009
Space Heating (2) Space Cooling (3) Water Heating Electronics (4) Refrigeration (5) Lighting Wet Clean (6) Cooking Computers Other (7) Total
Note(s):
Coal 0.0
10.6
1.3
0.0
Electricity 12.6 31.9 13.1 16.9 15.4 14.9 13.1 4.3 4.8 53.0 180.0
Total 79.4 31.9 29.4 16.9 15.4 14.9 14.2 8.5 4.8 59.3 274.7
Percent 28.9% 11.6% 10.7% 6.2% 5.6% 5.4% 5.2% 3.1% 1.8% 21.6% 100%
1) Expenditures include coal and exclude wood. 2) Includes furnace fans ($2.4 billion). 3) Fan energy use included. 4) Includes color televisions ($16.9 billion). 5) Includes refrigerators ($12.0 billion) and freezers ($3.4 billion). 6) Includes clothes washers ($0.8 billion), natural gas clothes dryers ($1.1 billion), electric clothes dryers ($9.0 billion), and dishwashers ($3.3 billion). 7) Includes small electric devices, heating elements, motors, swimming pool heaters, hot tub heaters, outdoor grills, and natural gas outdoor lighting.
Data 2005: Prices and Expenditures, Feb. 2008, p. 24 for coal price; EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for price deflators.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2007, Table A2, p. 117-119 and Table A4, p. 122-123 for energy, Table A3, p. 120-121 for prices; EIA, State Energy
2.3.9 Year 1980 1990 2000 2006 2010 2015 2020 2025 2030
Average Annual Energy Expenditures per Household, by Year ($2006) Total Expenditure 1,858 1,669 1,710 2,003 2,084 1,895 1,883 1,899 1,954
Source(s): EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Prices and Expenditures, Feb. 2008, p. 24 for 1980-2005; EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119, Table A4, p. 122-123 for consumption, Table A3, p. 120-121 for prices 2006-2030; EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for price deflators; and DOC, Statistical Abstract of the United States Historical Data for 1980-2005 occupied units.
2.3.10
2005 Energy End-Use Expenditures for an Average Household, by Region ($2006) Northeast 978 186 347 180 770 2,379 Midwest 672 163 274 135 620 1,840 South 345 425 292 136 666 1,835 West 328 244 296 143 667 1,542 National 536 290 298 146 675 1,873
Space Heating Air-Conditioning Water Heating Refrigerators Other Appliances and Lighting Total (1)
Note(s):
Source(s): EIA, A Look at Residential Energy Consumption in 2005, October 2008, Table US-15; EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D,
2-55
October 2009
Source(s): EIA, A Look at Residential Energy Consumption in 2005, Oct. 2008, Table US-1 part1; and EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for price inflators.
Source(s): EIA, A Look at Residential Energy Consumption in 2005, Oct. 2008, Tables US-1 part 1; and EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for price inflators.
2.3.13
2005 Household Energy Expenditures, by Vintage ($2006) | | | | | | | | | Percent of Residential Sector Expenditures 43% 15% 16% 17% 9% Total 100%
Year Prior to 1970 1970 to 1979 1980 to 1989 1990 to 1999 2000 to 2005 Average
Source(s): EIA, A Look at Residential Energy Consumption in 2005, Oct. 2008, Tables US-1 part 1; and EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for price inflators.
2.3.14
2005 Households and Energy Expenditures, by Income Level Energy Expenditures by Household Household Member 1,357 706 1,419 685 1,462 668 1,580 645 1,677 641 1,821 685 1,916 695 2,220 773 2,528 828 Mean Individual Energy Burden (1) 0.214477636 0.113524541 0.083545244 0.063201264 0.04791497 0.040467116 0.030656245 0.025371574 0.02528 0.063691238
Household Income Less than $9,999 $10,000 to $14,999 $15,000 to $19,999 $20,000 to $29,999 $30,000 to $39,999 $40,000 to $49,999 $50,000 to $74,999 $75,000 to $99,999 $100,000 or more Total
Note(s):
Households (10^6) 9.9 9% 8.5 8% 8.4 8% 15.1 14% 13.6 12% 11.0 10% 19.8 18% 10.6 10% 14.2 13% 111.1 100%
1) See Tables 2.3.15 for more on energy burdens. 2) A household is defined as a family, an individual, or a group of up to nine unrelated individuals occupying the same housing unit.
p. 377 for price inflators.
Source(s): EIA, A Look at Residential Energy Consumption in 2005, Oct. 2008, Tables US-1 part 2; and EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D,
2.3.15
Energy Burden Definitions and Residential Energy Burdens, by Weatherization Eligibility and Year (1)
2-56
October 2009
Energy burden is an important statistic for policy makers who are considering the need for energy assistance. Energy burden can be defined broadly as the burden placed on household incomes by the cost of energy, or more simply the ratio of energy expenditures to income for a household. However, there are different ways to compute energy burden, and different interpretations and uses of the energy burden statistics. DOE Weatherization primarily uses mean individual burden and mean group burden since these statistics provide data on how an "average" individual household fares against an "average" group of households (that is, how burdens are distributed for the population). DOE Weatherization (and HHS) also uses the median individual burden which shows the burden of a "typical" individual. 1987 Mean Group 0.04 13.0% 0.04 0.13 1990 Mean Mean Indvdl Group 0.068 0.032 14.4% 10.1% 0.035 N.A. N.A. N.A. FY 2000 (2) Mean Mdn Mean Indvdl Indvdl Group 0.061 0.035 0.024 12.1% 7.9% 7.7% 0.03 0.026 0.02 N.A. N.A. N.A. FY 2005 (3) Mean Mdn Mean Indvdl Indvdl Group 0.068 0.037 0.029 14.6% 8.6% 9.1% 0.032 0.028 0.023 0.202 0.137 0.128
Total U.S. Households Federally Eligible Federally Ineligible Below 125% Poverty Line
Note(s):
1) See Section 7.1 for more on low-income housing. 2) Data are derived from RECS 1997, adjusted to reflect FY 2000, HDD, CDD, 3) Data are derived from RECS 2001, adjusted to reflect FY 2005, HDD, CDD, and fuel prices.
Energy Notebook for FY 2000, April 2002, Tables A-2a, A-2b, and A-2c, p. 48-50 for FY 2000; HHS, LIHEAP Report to Congress FY 1995, Aug. 1997, p. 55 for energy burden definitions; HHS, Characterizing the Impact of Energy Expenditures on Low-Income Households: An Analysis of Alternative National Energy Burden Statistics, November 1994, p. vii-ix for burdens; ORNL, Scope of the of the Weatherization Assistance Program: Profile of the Population in Need, Mar. 1994, p. xii for mean individual and mean group burdens and p. xi for 1990 Federally ineligible mean individual burden; and EIA, Household Energy Consumption and Expenditures 1987, Oct. 1989, Table 13, p. 48-50 for 1987 mean group burdens.
Source(s): HHS, LIHEAP Home Energy Notebook for Fiscal Year 2005, May 2007, Tables A-2a, A-2b, and A-2c, p. 59-61 for FY 2005; HHS, LIHEAP Home
2.3.16
1998 Cost Breakdown of a 2,150-Square-Foot, New Single-Family Home ($2006) (1) Cost 64,626 24% 4,223 30,927 10,272 11,304 16,131 28,212 7,211 8,837 5,638 1,560 6,171 2,165 17,567 5,152 15,645 3,840 9,238 25,163 273,882 2% 0.113 0.038 0.041 0.059 0.103 0.026 0.032 0.021 0.006 0.023 0.008 0.064 2% 6% 1% 3% 9% 1
Finished Lot Construction Cost Inspection/Fees Shell/Frame Framing Windows/Doors Exterior Finish Foundation Wall/Finish Trim Flooring Equipment Plumbing Electrical Wiring Lighting Fixtures HVAC Appliances Property Features Financing Overhead & General Expenses Marketing Sales Commission Profit Total
Note(s):
1) Based on a NAHB Survey asking builders to provide a detailed breakdown of the cost of constructing a 2,150 SF house with 3 or 4 bedrooms on a 7,500- to 10,000SF lot. Average sales price of a new home in 42 surveyed markets was $226,680 (in $1998).
for price inflators.
Source(s): NAHB, The Truth About Regulatory Barriers to Housing Affordability, 1999, p. 4; and EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377
2-57
October 2009
Res.% Res.% of Total U.S. of Total Global 19% 5.0% 19% 4.5% 20% 5.0% 20% 4.3% 21% 4.0% 21% 3.7% 21% 3.6% 21% 3.5% 21% 3.4%
1) Excludes emissions of buildings-related energy consumption in the industrial sector. Emissions assume complete combustion from energy consumption and exclude energy production activities such as gas flaring, coal mining, and cement production. 2) Carbon emissions calculated from EIA, Assumptions to the AEO 2008 and differs from EIA, AEO 2008, Table A18. Buildings sector total varies by 0.7% for year 2006 from EIA, AEO 2008. 3) U.S. buildings emissions approximately equal the combined carbon emissions of Japan, France, and the United Kingdom.
Gases in the U.S. 2003, Dec. 2004, Tables 7-11, p. 29-31 for 1990 and 2000; EIA, Assumptions to the Annual Energy Outlook 2008, June 2008, Table 2, p. 9 for carbon coefficients; EIA, AEO 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 137-139 for 2006-2030 energy consumption and Table A18, p. 164 for 2006-2030 emissions; EIA, International Energy Outlook 2007, May 2007, Table A10, p. 93 for 2004-2030 global emissions; and EIA, International Energy Annual 2007, July 2008, Table H1, www.eia.doe.gov for 1980-2000 global emission.
Source(s): EIA, Emissions of Greenhouse Gases in the U.S. 1985-1990, Sept. 1993, Appendix B, Tables B1-B5, p. 73-74 for 1980; EIA, Emissions of Greenhouse
2.4.2
2001 End-Use Carbon Dioxide Emissions Splits for an Average Household, by Region (Pounds of CO2) Northeast 9,143 1,467 2,952 1,444 6,960 21,966 Midwest 8,731 2,063 2,634 2,041 8,697 24,165 South 4,906 4,742 3,140 2,463 9,226 24,477 West 4,483 2,170 2,538 1,796 7,127 18,114 National 6,505 3,197 2,922 2,068 8,179 22,871
Space Heating Space Cooling Water Heating Refrigerator Other Appliances & Lighting Total
Source(s): EIA, A Look at Residential Energy Consumption in 2001, Apr. 2004, Tables CE(2-5)-(9-12)c; EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2007, Feb. 2007, Table A2, p. 137-139, Table A17, p. 163 for consumption data, and Table A18, p. 164 for emissions data; and EIA, Assumptions to the AEO 2007, Feb. 2007, Table 2, p. 9 for coefficients.
2-58
October 2009
Space Heating (4) Space Cooling Water Heating Lighting Electronics (5) Refrigeration (6) Wet Clean (7) Cooking Computers Other (8) Adjust to SEDS (9) Total
Note(s):
Coal 0.8
3.9 11.6
2.0 9.6
238.7
51.5
29.5
Electricity (3) 62.3 159.7 79.2 142.5 100.0 88.6 72.2 42.8 12.5 35.8 70.1 865.6
Total 292.8 159.7 147.6 142.5 100.0 88.6 76.1 56.4 12.5 45.3 70.1 1,191.5
Percent 24.6% 13.4% 12.4% 12.0% 8.4% 7.4% 6.4% 4.7% 1.0% 3.8% 5.9% 100%
1) Emissions assume complete combustion from energy consumption, excluding gas flaring, coal mining, and cement production. Emissions exclude wood since it is assumed that the carbon released from combustion is reabsorbed in a future carbon cycle. Carbon emissions calculated from EIA, Assumptions to the AEO 2008 and differs from AEO 2008, Table A18. Buildings sector total varies by 0.7% from AEO 2008. 2) Includes kerosene space heating (5.4 MMT). 3) Excludes electric imports by utilities. 4) Includes residential furnace fans (10.1 MMT). 5) Includes color television (62.2 MMT) and other office equipment(11.9 MMT). 6) Includes refrigerators (73.1 MMT) and freezers (15.6 MMT). 7) Includes clothes washers (6.7 MMT), natural gas clothes dryers (3.9 MMT), electric clothes dryers (47.7 MMT), and dishwashers (17.9 MMT). Does not include water heating energy. 8) Includes residential small electric devices, heating elements, motors, swimming pool heaters, hot tub heaters, outdoor grills, and natural gas outdoor lighting. 9) Emissions related to a discrepancy between data sources. Energy attributable to the residential sector, but not directly to specific end-uses.
and Table A18, p. 144 for emissions; EIA, Assumptions to the AEO 2008, June 2008, Table 2, p. 10 for emission coefficients; BTS/A.D. Little, Electricity Consumption by Small End-Uses in Residential Buildings, Aug. 1998, Appendix A for residential electric end-uses; EIA, AEO 1999, Dec. 1998, Table A4, p. 118-119
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119, Table A4, p. 122-123 and Table A5, p. 124-125 for energy consumption,
2006 Residential Buildings Energy End-Use Carbon Dioxide Emissions Splits (Million Metric Tons)
Adjust to SEDS , 70.1 Other , 45.3 Computers, 12.5
Cooking, 56.4 Wet Clean , 76.1 Space Heating, 292.8
Electronics , 100.0
Lighting, 142.5
2-59
October 2009
Space Heating (4) Space Cooling Water Heating Lighting Refrigeration (5) Wet Clean (6) Electronics (7) Cooking Computers Other (8) Total
Note(s):
Coal 0.8
262.6
55.1
5.8
0.8
Electricity (3) 67.1 144.5 70.1 131.4 81.9 69.4 71.7 19.8 17.4 230.9 904.1
Total 326.5 144.5 137.4 131.4 81.9 73.3 71.7 33.7 17.4 241.0 1,258.8
Percent 25.9% 11.5% 10.9% 10.4% 6.5% 5.8% 5.7% 2.7% 1.4% 19.1% 100%
1) Emissions assume complete combustion from energy consumption, excluding gas flaring, coal mining, and cement production. Emissions exclude wood since it is assumed that the carbon released from combustion is reabsorbed in a future carbon cycle. 2) Includes kerosene space heating (5.8 MMT). 3) Excludes electric imports by utilities. 4) Includes residential furnace fans (11.6 MMT). 5) Includes refrigerators (67.1 MMT) and freezers (14.8 MMT). 6) Includes clothes washers (6.0 MMT), natural gas clothes dryers (3.9 MMT), electric clothes dryers (46.5 MMT), and dishwashers (16.9 MMT). Does not include water heating energy. 7) Includes color television (71.7 MMT). 8) Includes residential small electric devices, heating elements, motors, swimming pool heaters, hot tub heaters, outdoor grills, and natural gas outdoor lighting.
and Table A18, p. 144 for emissions; EIA, Assumptions to the AEO 2008, June 2008, Table 2, p. 10 for emission coefficients.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119, Table A4, p. 122-123 and Table A5, p. 124-125 for energy consumption,
2.4.5
2020 Residential Buildings Energy End-Use Carbon Dioxide Emissions Splits, by Fuel Type (Million Metric Tons) (1) Natural Gas 203.1 0.0 61.0 Petroleum Distil. Resid. LPG Oth(2) Total 47.3 14.9 6.1 68.3 6.0 2.9 9.0
Space Heating (4) Space Cooling Water Heating Lighting Refrigeration (5) Electronics (6) Wet Clean (8) Cooking Computers Other (9) Total
Note(s):
Coal 0.8
4.2 13.1
281.5
53.4
6.1
0.8
Electricity (3) 71.7 164.2 76.4 91.9 83.0 77.3 71.0 22.6 22.0 269.3 949.4
Total 344.0 164.2 146.4 91.9 83.0 77.3 75.2 37.8 22.0 282.1 1,323.9
Percent 26.0% 12.4% 11.1% 6.9% 6.3% 5.8% 5.7% 2.9% 1.7% 21.3% 100%
1) Emissions assume complete combustion from energy consumption, excluding gas flaring, coal mining, and cement production. Emissions exclude wood since it is assumed that the carbon released from combustion is reabsorbed in a future carbon cycle. 2) Includes kerosene space heating (5.7 MMT). 3) Excludes electric imports by utilities. 4) Includesresidential furnace fans (13.2 MMT). 5) Includes refrigerators (66.4 MMT) and freezers (16.6 MMT). 6) Includes color television (77.3 MMT). 8) Includes clothes washers (4.8 MMT), natural gas clothes dryers (4.2 MMT), electric clothes dryers (48.9 MMT), and dishwashers (17.3 MMT). Does not include water heating energy. 9) Includes residential small electric devices, heating elements, motors, swimming pool heaters, hot tub heaters, outdoor grills, and natural gas outdoor lighting.
and Table A18, p. 144 for emissions; EIA, Assumptions to the AEO 2008, June 2008, Table 2, p. 10 for emission coefficients.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119, Table A4, p. 122-123 and Table A5, p. 124-125 for energy consumption,
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Space Heating (4) Space Cooling Water Heating Electronics (5) Refrigeration (6) Lighting Wet Clean (7) Cooking Computers Other (8) Total
Note(s):
Coal 0.7
4.4 13.9
282.5
47.7
6.1
0.7
Electricity (3) 75.4 191.0 78.8 101.5 92.3 89.4 78.7 25.5 28.9 317.8 1,079.1
Total 345.6 191.0 144.4 101.5 92.3 89.4 83.1 41.5 28.9 333.3 1,450.9
Percent 23.8% 13.2% 10.0% 7.0% 6.4% 6.2% 5.7% 2.9% 2.0% 23.0% 100%
1) Emissions assume complete combustion from energy consumption, excluding gas flaring, coal mining, and cement production. Emissions exclude wood since it is assumed that the carbon released from combustion is reabsorbed in a future carbon cycle. 2) Includes kerosene space heating (5.7 MMT). 3) Excludes electric imports by utilities. 4) Includes residential furnace fans (14.6 MMT). 5) Includes color television 101.5 MMT). 6) Includes refrigerators (71.8 MMT) and freezers (20.5 MMT). 7) Includes clothes washers (5.0 MMT), natural gas clothes dryers (4.4 MMT), electric clothes dryers (54.2 MMT), and dishwashers (19.5 MMT). Does not include water heating energy. 8) Includes residential small electric devices, heating elements, motors, swimming pool heaters, hot tub heaters, outdoor grills, and natural gas outdoor lighting.
and Table A18, p. 144 for emissions; EIA, Assumptions to the AEO 2008, June 2008, Table 2, p. 10 for emission coefficients.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119, Table A4, p. 122-123 and Table A5, p. 124-125 for energy consumption,
2.4.7
2006 Methane Emissions for U.S. Residential Buildings Energy Production, by Fuel Type (MMT CO2 Equivalent) (1)
Fuel Type Petroleum Natural Gas Coal Wood Electricity (2) Total
Note(s):
1) Sources of emissions include oil and gas production, processing, and distribution; coal mining; and utility and site combustion. Carbon Dioxide equivalent units are calculated by converting methane emissions to carbon dioxide emissions (methane's global warming potential is 23 times that of carbon dioxide). 2) Emissions of electricity generators attributable to the buildings sector.
U.S. Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Sinks: 1990-2006, April 2008, Table 3-16, p. 3-25 for stationary combustion emissions; and EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119 for energy consumption.
Source(s): EIA, Emissions of Greenhouse Gases in the U.S. 2006, Nov. 2007, Table 15, p. 22 for energy production emissions; EPA, Inventory of
2.4.8 -
Characteristics of U.S. Construction Waste Two to seven tons of waste (a rough average of four pounds of waste per square foot) are generated during the construction of a new single-family detached house. 15 to 70 pounds of hazardous waste are generated during the construction of a detached, single-family house. Hazardous wastes include paint, caulk, roofing cement, aerosols, solvents, adhesives, oils, and greases. Each year, U.S. builders produce between 30 and 35 million tons of construction, renovation, and demolition (C&D) waste. Annual C&D debris accounts for roughly 24% of the municipal solid waste stream. Wastes include wood (27% of total) and other (73% of total, including cardboard and paper; drywall/plaster; insulation; siding; roofing; metal; concrete, asphalt, masonry, bricks, and dirt rubble; waterproofing materials; and landscaping material). As much as 95% of buildings-related construction waste is recyclable, and most materials are clean and unmixed.
Source(s): First International Sustainable Construction Conference Proceedings, Construction Waste Management and Recycling Strategies in the U.S., Nov. 1994, p. 689; Fine Homebuilding, Construction Waste, Feb./Mar. 1995, p. 70-75; NAHB, Housing Economics, Mar. 1995, p. 12-13; and Cost Engineering, Cost-Effective Waste Minimization for Construction Managers, Vol. 37/No. 1, Jan. 1995, p. 31-39.
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Material Solid Sawn Wood Engineered Wood Drywall Cardboard (OCC) Metals Vinyl (PVC) (3) Masonry (4) Hazardous Materials Other Total (5)
Note(s):
1) See Table 2.2.7 for materials used in the construction of a new single-family home. 2) Volumes are highly variable due to compressibility and captured air space in waste materials. 3) Assuming 3 sides of exterior clad in vinyl siding. 4) Assuming a brick veneer on home's front facade. 5) Due to rounding, sum does not add up to total.
Source(s): NAHB, Residential Construction Waste: From Disposal to Management, Oct. 1996, www.nahb.org.
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Buildings Energy Data Book: 2.5 New Residential Buildings Construction and Companies
2.5.1 2006 Five Largest Residential Homebuilders Number of Home Closings (1) 53,410 49,568 41,487 37,539 32,124 214,128 4,862 Gross Revenue ($million) 15,016 16,267 14,274 14,400 11,004 70,961 357 Market Share of Total New Home Closings (%) (2) 5.0% 4.7% 3.9% 3.5% 3.0% 20.2% 0.5%
October 2009
Homebuilder D.R. Horton Pulte Homes Lennar Homes Centex Corporation KB Home Total of Top Five Habitat for Humanity (3)
Note(s):
1) 2006 total U.S. new home closings were 1.06 million (only single-family). 2) Total share of closings of top 20 builders was 35%. Total share of the top 100 builders was 47%. 3) Habitat for Humanity built more than 400 homes during the week of May 31, 2007; Habitat for Humanity has built over 1,000 homes in the New Orleans area since Hurricane Katrina. Habitat for Humanity's 2,100 worldwide affiliates have completed more than 200,000 homes since 1976, providing more than 1,000,000 with housing.
http://www.habitat.org/, for note 3.
Source(s): Builder Magazine, May 2007, Builder 100; e-mail correspondence with Habitat for Humanity for relevant data, Aug. 2007; and Habitat for Humanity,
2.5.2
Value of New Building Construction, by Year ($2006 Billion) Residential 154.4 198.5 194.1 166.9 258.0 341.6 411.8 473.6 462.3 GDP 6,013 7,053 8,286 9,357 11,437 12,114 12,437 12,819 13,187
Source(s): DOC, Current Construction Reports: Value of New Construction Put in Place, C30, Aug. 2003, Table 1 for 1980-1990; DOC, Annual Value of Construction Put in Place, July 2007 for 1995-2006; and EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for price deflators.
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1) Improvements includes additions, alterations, reconstruction, and major replacements. Repairs include maintenance.
Reports: Expenditures for Nonresidential Improvements and Repairs: 1992, CSS/92, Sept. 1994, Table A, p. 2 for 1986-1990 expenditures; DOC, 1997 Census of Construction Industries: Industry Summary, Jan. 2000, Table 7, p. 15; DOC, Annual Value of Private Construction Put in Place, May 2008 for 1995-2006; and EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for GDP and price deflators.
Source(s): DOC, Expenditures for Residential Improvements and Repairs by Property Type, Quarterly, May 2005 for 1980-1990; DOC, Current Construction
2.6.2
2005 Professional and Do-It-Yourself Improvements, by Project ($2006) Professional Installation Do-It-Yourself Installation Total Mean Total Mean Homeowners Expenditures Expenditures Homeowners Expenditures Expenditures (millions) ($billion) ($) (thousands) ($billion) ($) 0.61 9.0 14,398 0.20 1.3 6,698 1.13 13.4 11,550 1.05 5.7 5,411 1.27 30.4 23,212 1.38 9.3 6,767 1.13 8.8 7,527 1.34 3.8 2,852 3.85 23.7 5,983 3.11 7.9 2,527 0.82 5.3 6,322 0.39 1.0 2,583 2.67 14.5 5,281 0.81 1.9 2,366 2.44 7.3 2,895 0.51 1.5 2,909 2.53 7.8 2,995 1.72 2.6 1,501 4.65 12.7 2,661 3.48 4.2 1,221 1.35 1.6 1,144 0.89 0.4 451 0.84 1.5 1,726 2.08 1.0 467 0.59 1.4 2,361 0.72 1.1 1,513 3.59 2.4 657 2.49 1.0 385
Repair/Improvement Disaster Repairs Kitchen Remodeled Additions Built Bathroom Remodeled or Added Exterior Improvements Siding Replaced or Added Roof Replacement HVAC Replacement Windows/Doors Installed Flooring/Paneling/Ceiling Replacement Electric System Replacement Plumbing Replacement Insulation Added Appliance/Major Equipment Replacement
Note(s):
Expenditures are $39.1 billion higher in Table 2.6.1. This discrepancy is due to sampling methods used by HUD for the American Housing Survey and DOC in the Survey of Expenditures for Residential Improvements and Repairs.
Source(s): Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University, Improving America's Housing 2007, Feb. 2007, Table A-2, p. 28.
2.6.3
Single-Family Residential Renovations, by Project and Vintage Year Home was Built 1961-73 1974-80 54% 60% 59% 55% 14% 24% 15% 16% 6% 12% 11% 10% 6% 7% 3% 4%
Kitchen Remodeled Bathroom Remodeled Add Room(s) Exterior Improvement Basement Room Finished Redesign/Restructure Bathroom Added Sun room Added
Note(s):
Data based on a nationwide study of 819 consumers who remodeled their homes in the past 12 months or will in the next 12 months.
Source(s): Professional Remodeler, Consumer Research: What Consumers Want, Sept. 2002, p.44-50.
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Envelope Siding Replacement - Vinyl Siding Replacement - Foam-backed vinyl Siding Replacement - Fiber-cement Window Replacement - Vinyl Window Replacement - Wood Roofing Replacement - Asphalt Roofing Replacement - Steel Remodel Minor Kitchen Remodel Major Kitchen Remodel Bathroom Remodel Attic Bedroom Remodel Basement Remodel Home Office Remodel Additions Deck Addition - Wood Deck Addition - Composite Bathroom Addition Garage Addition Sunroom Addition Family Room Addition Master Suite Addition Two-Story Addition Back-Up Power Generator
Note(s):
Job cost includes labor, material, subtrades, contractor overhead and profit. Resale value based on a survey of appraisers, sales agents, and brokers. The survey asked for the estimated increase in resale value of standardized remodeling projects. Definitions of remodeling projects are available at costvalue.remodelingmagazine.com
Source(s): 2007 Hanley Wood, LLC. Reproduced by permission. Complete regional and city data from the Remodeling 2007 Cost vs. Value Report can be downloaded for free at costvalue.remodelingmagazine.com.
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Delivered Energy Consumption Intensities of Public Multi-Family Buildings, by Fuel and Region (Thousand Btu/SF) Electricity 27.7 22.5 53.5 22.0 33.0 Natural Gas 45.9 49.9 27.9 25.3 43.4 Fuel Oil 39.9 N.A. N.A. N.A. Total 71.5 70.3 65.9 46.2 68.3
Source(s): HUD, Benchmarking Utility Usage in Public Housing, December 2007, http://www.hud.gov/offices/pih/programs/ph/phecc/finbnchrpt.doc.
Delivered Energy Consumption Intensities of Public Multi-Family Buildings, by Fuel and Region (Million Btu/Household) Electricity 21.2 16.6 39.4 16.6 24.6 Natural Gas 34.9 36.6 20.0 19.3 32.2 Fuel Oil 36.2 N.A. N.A. N.A. Total 54.7 51.8 48.5 34.8 51.0
National Average
Source(s): HUD, Benchmarking Utility Usage in Public Housing, December 2007, http://www.hud.gov/offices/pih/programs/ph/phecc/finbnchrpt.doc.
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Company CMH Manufacturing Champion Enterprises, Inc. Palm Harbor Homes, Inc. Fleetwood Enterprises, Inc. Skyline Corporation
Note(s):
1) Data based on mail-in surveys from manufacturers which may not be entirely complete. 2) Market shares based on total gross sales volume of the factory-built home producers included in the list of the top 25 factory-built producers responding to the survey. In 2007, surveyed factory-built home sales were estimated at $6.6 billion and 133,361 units.
2.8.2
2007 Top Five Manufacturers of Modular/3D Housing Units (1) Gross Sales Volume ($million) 438.7 228.8 165.4 162.9 110.6 Market Share of Top 25 Company Sales (2) 27% 14% 10% 10% 7%
Company Champion Enterprises, Inc. CMH Manufacturing All American Homes, LLC Palm Harbor Homes, Inc. Excel Homes LLC
Note(s):
1) Data based on mail-in surveys from manufacturers, which may not be entirely complete. 2) Market shares based on total gross sales volume of the Modular/3D home producers included in the list of the top 25 factory-built producers responding to the survey. In 2007, surveyed Modular/3D home sales were estimated at $1.6 billion and 20,601 units.
2.8.3
2007 Top Five Manufacturers of HUD-Code (Mobile) Homes (1) Gross Sales Volume ($million) 1,099 848 600 516 376 Market Share of Top 25 Company Sales (2) 23% 18% 12% 11% 8%
Company CMH Manufacturing Champion Enterprises, Inc. Fleetwood Enterprises, Inc. Palm Harbor Homes Skyline Corporation
Note(s):
1) Data based on mail-in surveys from manufacturers, which may not be entirely complete. 2) Market shares based on total gross sales volume of the HUD-Code home producers included in the list of the top 25 factory-built producers responding to the survey. In 2007, surveyed HUD-Code home sales were estimated at $4.83 billion and 109,320 units.
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Company Carpenter Contractors Automated Building Company Landmark Truss Southern Building Products Dolan Lumber & Truss
Note(s):
1) Data based on mail-in surveys from manufacturers, which may not be entirely complete. 2) Market shares based on total gross sales volume of producers of only components included in the list of the top 26 IH producers responding to the survey. In 2004, surveyed component sales was estimated at $665.1 million. 3) The top 26 companies employ over 4,970 people at their plants.
2.8.5
2004 Number of Industrialized Housing Manufacturers Versus Production Companies (Stick-Builders) Number of Companies 3,500 200 90 7,000 2,200 170
Type Panelized Modular (1) HUD-Code Production Builders Component Manufacturers Special (Commercial) Units
Note(s):
Source(s): Automated Builder Magazine, Mar. 2005, p. 34-35; Automated Builder Magazine, Jan. 2004, p. 16 for Note 1.
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DOE Weatherization: Department of Energy's Weatherization Assistance Program DOE Weatherization Eligible Households: Households with incomes at or below 125% of the Federal poverty level, which varies by family size; however, a State may instead elect to use the LIHEAP income standard if its State LIHEAP income standard is at least 125% of the Federal poverty level. Data listed in this chapter include previously weatherized units. DOE Weatherization Eligible Households are a subset of Federally Eligible Households. DOE Weatherization Recipient Households: Households that have received weatherization under DOE Weatherization funding. Federally Eligible Households: Households with incomes below the Federal maximum standard of 150% of the poverty line or 60% of the State median income, whichever is higher. HHS: Department of Health and Human Services LIHEAP: HHS's Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program LIHEAP Eligible Households: Households with incomes below the Federal maximum poverty income level, i.e., 150% of the Federal poverty guidelines or 60% of State median income, whichever is higher. LIHEAP Recipient Households: Households that received fuel subsidies for home heating, cooling, or energy crisis benefits in the year previous to a particular household survey.
Source(s): ORNL, Scope of the Weatherization Assistance Program: Profile of the Population in Need, Mar. 1994, p. 1.2 for Weatherization eligible, Weatherization recipient, and LIHEAP eligible households; EIA, Housing Characteristics 1993, June 1995, p. 336 for Federally eligible for weatherization; and HHS, LIHEAP Report to Congress FY 2001, Feb. 2003, Table E-1, p. 105 and Figure 1, p. iii for LIHEAP recipient household.
2.9.2
Energy burden is an important statistic for policy makers who are considering the need for energy assistance. Energy burden can be defined broadly as the burden placed on household incomes by the cost of energy, or more simply, the ratio of energy expenditures to household income. However, there are different ways to compute energy burden, and different interpretations and uses of the energy burden statistics. DOE Weatherization primarily uses mean individual burden and mean group burden since these statistics provide data on how an "average" individual household fares against an "average" group of households (that is, how burdens are distributed for the population). DOE Weatherization (and HHS) also uses the median individual burden which shows the burden of a "typical" individual. Mean Individual Burden: This statistic is calculated by first computing the energy burden for each household using RECS data and then taking a mean of the household-level energy burden estimates. It furnishes the most complete information about how a burden is distributed for the population. Mean Group Burden: This statistic calculates energy expenditures for all households in the group and divides by the average of all incomes for the group. This statistic is calculated as the ratio between aggregate energy expenditures of a group (from RECS and CPS) and aggregate group income (from CPS). Median Individual Burden: This statistic is computed by taking a median of the RECS household-level energy burden estimates (the point at which 50% of households have a higher burden value and 50% have a lower value).
Source(s): HHS, LIHEAP Report to Congress FY 2000, Apr. 2002, p. 45 for energy burden definition; HHS, Characterizing the Impact of Energy Expenditures on Low-Income Households: An Analysis of Alternative National Energy Burden Statistics, Nov. 1994, p. vii and ix for burdens; and ORNL, Scope of the Weatherization Assistance Program: Profile of the Population in Need, Mar. 1994, p. xii for mean individual and mean group burdens.
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1977 1980 1985 1987 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 1977-2005
Note(s):
1) Year of receiving funding follows DOE Weatherization's Program Year of Apr. 1-Mar. 31. 2) Federally eligible for DOE and HHS (LIHEAP) Weatherization. Includes previously weatherized units.
May 1992, Table 17, p. 54-55 for 1990 data; EIA, Housing Characteristics 1993, June 1995, Table 3.3a, p. 38-42 for 1993 data; EIA, Annual Energy Outlook (AEO) 1996, Jan. 1996,Table A4, p. 82-83 for 1992 and 1994 households; EIA, AEO 1998, Dec. 1997, Table A4, p. 106-107 for 1995-1996 households; EIA, AEO 2001, Dec.2000, Table A4, p. 133-134 for 1998-2000 households; EIA, AEO 2005, Feb. 2005, Table A4, p. 125-126 for 2002 households; EIA, AEO 2006, Feb. 2006, Table A4, p. 139-140 for 2003-2004 households; EIA, A Look at Residential Energy Consumption in 1997, Nov. 1999, Table HC1-3a, p. 38-39; EIA, RECS 1997 for eligible households; EIA, Residential Energy Consumption 2001, Apr. 2004, Table HC2-3a for 2001 eligible households; National Association for State Community Services programs: Weatherization Assistance Program PY 2005 Funding Survey for 2005 data; EIA, RECS 2001 for eligible households; and DOC, Income, Poverty, and Valuation of Noncash Benefits: 1994, Apr. 1996, Table B-1, for 1991 households.
Source(s): DOE for weatherization recipients; EIA, Housing Characteristics 1987, May 1989, Table 9, p. 20 for 1987 data; EIA, Housing Characteristics 1990,
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- Roughly 25% of Federally eligible households move in and out of poverty "classification" each year. - The average income of Federally eligible households in FY 2005 was $16,264, based on RECS and Bureau of the Census' Current Population Survey (CPS) data. - States target the neediest, especially the elderly, persons with disabilities, and families with children. - Since the inception of the Weatherization Assistance Program in 1976, over 5.8 million households have received weatherization services. - In FY 2005, the energy burden on Federally eligible households was more than four and a half times the burden on Federally ineligible households (14.6% versus 3.2%). - DOE weatherization saves an average of 13-34% on home energy bills (depending on main heating fuel). This equates to $1.54 in energy benefits being produced for every $1.00 invested. These services reduce average annual energy costs by $358 per household.
Note(s): For weatherization eligibility terminology, see Table 7.1.10. For acronyms, see Key Terminology.
HHS, LIHEAP Home Energy Notebook for FY 2005, May 2007, Table A-2a, p. 59 for Federally eligible average income and Table A-2b, p. 60 for energy burdens; ORNL, Progress Report of the National Weatherization Assistance Program, Sept. 1997, DOE, Weatherization Works, Progress Report of the National Weatherization Assistance Program, Feb. 1998; and EERE/OWIP, Weatherization Assistance Program Briefing Book, May 2006 for weatherization savings.
Source(s): ORNL, Weatherization Works: Final Report on the National Weatherization Evaluation, Sept. 1994, p. 1 for migrating poor; ORNL, 1996 for targeting;
2.9.5
Weatherization Program Facts - PY 2005 weatherization funding breakdown: DOE 36%, LIHEAP 36%, others 28%. (1) - The Federal Government's outlay for fuel subsidies runs from $4.0 to 4.4 billion per year. The major two agencies dispensing fuel subsidies are HUD and HHS (through LIHEAP). - HUD spends over $1.48 billion annually to pay all or part of the total utility bills (including water/sewer) for 1.2 million low-income households. Approximately 22% of public housing authorities' expenditures are for utilities (including water). In addition, HUD estimates tenant expenditures on utilities (excluding water) at about $278 million in 1997. - LIHEAP spends 85% of its funding on direct fuel subsidies and weatherization. Up to 15% can be spent for weatherization activities and the remainder is spent on fuel subsidies. A maximum of 25% of funding is available for weatherization activities if HHS approves a waiver. LIHEAP weatherization funding has ranged from 8-19% of total LIHEAP funds. Since 2002, LIHEAP weatherization funding has been about 12% of total funds.
Note(s):
Source(s): National Association for State Community Services programs: Weatherization Assistance Program PY 2005 Funding Survey for spending; HHS,
2.9.6
Weatherization Costs and Savings - DOE Weatherization program requires that States spend no more than an average of $2,885 per household in PY 2007. All States are using energy audits to determine the most cost-effective weatherization measures. - In spite of funding reductions that reduced production, technical advances have produced 80% higher energy savings on a per-dwelling basis. Increases in energy savings were achieved through improvements in: diagnostic technology and techniques, weatherization materials and installation techniques, training, and audit tools. - DOE weatherization creates an average energy savings of $358 per household, reduces household annual gas heating consumption 31% with a benefit-cost ratio of 1.53.
Source(s): EERE/OWIP, Weatherization Program Notice 07-1, Dec. 1, 2006 for average expenditures; ORNL, Weatherization Plus Progress Report: Poised to Move Forward, June 2001; and EERE/OWIP, Weatherization Assistance Program Briefing Book, May 2007 for savings.
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Total U.S. Households Federally Eligible Federally Ineligible Below 125% Poverty Line
Note(s):
FY 2005 (2) Mean Mdn Mean Indvdl Indvdl Group 6.8% 3.7% 2.9% 14.6% 8.6% 9.1% 3.2% 2.8% 2.3% N.A. N.A. N.A.
1) Data are derived from RECS 1997, adjusted to reflect FY 2000 HDD, CDD, and fuel prices. 2) Data are derived from RECS 2001, adjusted to reflect FY 2004 HDD, CDD, and fuel prices.
Weatherization Program: Profile of the Population in Need, Mar. 1994, p. xi. for 1990 Federally ineligible mean individual burden; HHS, Characterizing the Impact of Energy Expenditures on Low-Income Households: An Analysis of Alternative National Energy Burden Statistics, Nov. 1994, p. viii for 1990 total U.S. Households and Federally eligible burdens; HHS, LIHEAP Home Energy Notebook for FY 2000, Apr. 2000, Tables A-2a, A-2b, and A-2c, p. 48-50 for FY 2000; and HHS, LIHEAP Home Energy Notebook for FY 2005, May 2007, Tables A-2a, A-2b, and A-2c, p. 59-61.
Source(s): EIA, Household Energy Consumption and Expenditures 1987, Oct. 1989, Table 13, p. 48-50 for 1987 mean group burdens; ORNL, The Scope of the
2.9.8
FY 2005 Residential Energy Burdens, by Region (1) Northeast Mean Mdn Mean Indvdl Indvdl Group 8.9% 4.6% 3.3% 18.9% 10.2% 10.6% 3.8% 3.4% 2.6% South Mean Mdn Mean Indvdl Indvdl Group 7.1% 3.9% 3.0% 15.7% 9.6% 9.9% 3.2% 2.9% 2.5% Midwest Mean Mdn Mean Indvdl Indvdl Group 6.6% 3.8% 3.1% 14.3% 8.9% 10.0% 3.3% 3.0% 2.4% West Mean Mdn Mean Indvdl Indvdl Group 4.7% 2.8% 2.0% 9.4% 5.4% 6.0% 2.5% 2.2% 1.7%
1) Data are derived from RECS 2001, adjusted to reflect FY 2004 HDD, CDD, and fuel prices.
Source(s): HHS, LIHEAP Home Energy Notebook for FY 2005, May 2007, Tables A-2a, A-2b, and A-2c, p. 59-61.
2.9.9
2001 Housing Unit Ownership, by Income Level and Weatherization Eligibility (in Millions) Single-Family Own Rent 5.7 2.9 10.9 2.5 16.4 2.8 63.2 12.8 50.4 3.8 10.5 5.0 5.5 2.8 Multi-Family Unit Own Rent 0.3 8.0 1.0 5.7 1.2 5.2 3.9 0.9 3.0 0.3 22.6 11.8 10.8 6.5 Mobile Home Own Rent 1.2 0.4 2.3 0.4 1.3 0.2 5.7 2.6 3.1 1.1 1.1 0.7 0.4 0.5
2001 Household Income Less than $15,000 $15,000 to $30,000 $30,000 to $49,999 All Households Federally Eligible Federally Ineligible Below 100% Poverty Line
Source(s): EIA, 2001 Residential Energy Consumption Survey: Housing Characteristics Tables, Apr. 2004, Table HC1-3a.
2.9.10
2001 Average Energy Expenditures per Household Member and per Square Foot, by Weatherization Eligibility ($2006) Members/ Hhold 2.6 2.7 2.5 2.6 Square Feet/ Hhold 1,975 1,435 2,225 1,227
Total U.S. Households Federally Eligible Federally Ineligible Below 100% Poverty Line
Source(s): EIA, 2001 Residential Energy Consumption Survey: Household Energy Consumption and Expenditures Tables, Apr. 2004, Table CE1-5.1u and Table CE1-5.2u; and EIA, Annual Energy Review 2006, June 2007, Appendix D, p. 377 for implicit price deflators.
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October 2009
Commercial Primary Energy Consumption, by Year and Fuel Type (Quadrillion Btu and Percent of Total) Electricity Coal Renewable(2) Sales Losses Total 0.12 1.1% 0.02 0.2% 1.91 4.60 6.51 61.4% 0.12 0.9% 0.10 0.7% 2.86 6.62 9.48 71.0% 0.09 0.5% 0.13 0.7% 3.96 9.00 12.96 75.4% 0.08 0.5% 0.16 0.9% 4.43 9.66 14.09 78.6% 0.08 0.4% 0.16 0.8% 4.73 10.12 14.85 79.1% 0.08 0.4% 0.16 0.8% 5.19 10.98 16.17 79.4% 0.08 0.4% 0.16 0.7% 5.67 11.96 17.63 80.1% 0.08 0.4% 0.16 0.7% 6.15 12.87 19.02 80.7% 0.08 0.3% 0.17 0.7% 6.62 13.68 20.30 81.2% Growth Rate 2006-Year 1.1% 1.4% 1.5% 1.5% 1.4%
Natural Gas Petroleum (1) 2.67 25.2% 1.29 12.2% 2.70 20.2% 0.95 7.1% 3.25 18.9% 0.76 4.4% 2.92 16.3% 0.68 3.8% 3.04 16.2% 0.63 3.4% 3.29 16.2% 0.67 3.3% 3.47 15.8% 0.68 3.1% 3.63 15.4% 0.68 2.9% 3.78 15.1% 0.68 2.7%
Total(2) 10.60 13.36 17.18 17.93 18.77 20.37 22.02 23.58 25.02
1) Petroleum includes distillate and residual fuels, liquefied petroleum gas, kerosene, and motor gasoline. 2) Includes site -marketed and non-marketed renewable energy. 3) 2006 site -to-source electricity conversion = 3.18.
p. 117-119 for 2006-2030 and Table A17, p. 143-144 for non-marketed renewable energy.
Source(s): EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Consumption, Feb. 2008, Tables 8-12, p. 18-22 for 1980-2005; and EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2,
3.1.2
Commercial Site Renewable Energy Consumption (Quadrillion Btu) (1) Wood (2) 0.021 0.094 0.119 0.129 0.129 0.129 0.129 0.129 0.129 Solar Thermal (3) N.A N.A N.A 0.025 0.025 0.027 0.027 0.027 0.028 Solar PV(3) N.A. N.A. N.A. 0.001 0.003 0.003 0.005 0.007 0.010 GHP 0.000 0.003 0.008 N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. Total 0.021 0.096 0.126 0.155 0.157 0.159 0.161 0.164 0.167 Growth Rate 2006-Year 0.4% 0.3% 0.3% 0.3% 0.3%
1) Does not include renewable energy consumed by electric utilities (including hydroelectric). 2) Includes wood and wood waste, municipal solid waste, and other biomass used by the commercial sector to cogenerate electricity. 3) Includes only solar energy.
p. 143-144 for 2006-2030.
Source(s): EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Consumption, Feb. 2008, Tables 8-12, p. 18-22 for 1980-2005; and EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A17,
3.1.3
Commercial Delivered and Primary Energy Consumption Intensities, by Year Percent Floorspace Post-2000 (million SF) Floorspace (1) 50.9 N.A. 64.3 N.A. 68.5 N.A. 74.8 15% 78.8 24% 83.9 33% 89.3 41% 94.8 49% 100.8 56% Delivered Energy Consumption Total Consumption per (10^15 Btu) SF (thousand Btu/SF) 6.00 117.8 6.73 104.8 8.18 119.4 8.27 110.6 8.64 109.7 9.40 112.0 10.06 112.7 10.71 112.9 11.34 112.5 Primary Energy Consumption Total Consumption per (10^15 Btu) SF (thousand Btu/SF) 10.60 208.2 13.36 207.8 17.18 250.8 17.93 239.7 18.77 238.1 20.37 242.8 22.02 246.7 23.58 248.6 25.02 248.3
1) Percent built after Dec. 31, 2000. 2) Excludes parking garages and commercial buildings on multi-building manufacturing facilities.
1994, Jan. 1994, Table A5, p. 62 for 1990 floorspace; EIA, AEO 2003, Jan. 2003, Table A5, p. 127 for 2000 floorspace; and EIA, AEO 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119, Table A5, p. 124-125, and Table A17, p.143-144 for 2006-2030.
Source(s): EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Consumption, Feb. 2008, Tables 8-12, p. 18-22 for 1980-2000; DOE for 1980 floorspace; EIA, Annual Energy Outlook
3-75
October 2009
0.02 1.18
0.24
0.55
0.05
Other Renw. Site LPG Fuel(2) En.(3) Electric 1.40 0.71 0.10 0.21 0.42 0.38 0.02 0.16 0.23 0.21 0.04 0.08 0.05 0.13 0.57 0.11 0.08 0.15 0.16 4.43
Site Total Percent 1.40 16.9% 0.73 8.8% 1.73 20.9% 0.42 5.1% 0.38 4.6% 0.78 9.4% 0.23 2.8% 0.21 2.6% 0.27 3.3% 1.12 13.6% 1.00 12.1% 8.27 100%
| | | | | | | | | | | |
Primary Electric (4) 4.45 2.25 0.65 1.34 1.21 0.50 0.73 0.68 0.12 1.81 0.34 14.09
Primary Total Percent 4.45 24.8% 2.27 12.6% 2.17 12.1% 1.34 7.5% 1.21 6.7% 1.13 6.3% 0.73 4.1% 0.68 3.8% 0.35 2.0% 2.36 13.2% 1.23 6.9% 17.93 100%
1) Includes (0.42 quad) distillate fuel oil and (0.11 quad) residual fuel oil. 2) Kerosene (0.02 quad) and coal (0.08 quad) are assumed attributable to space heating. Motor gasoline (0.05 quad) assumed attributable to other end-uses. 3) Comprised of (0.13 quad) biomass, (0.03 quad) solar water heating, and (less than 0.01 quad) solar PV. 4) Site -to-source electricity conversion (due to generation and transmission losses) = 3.18. 5) Includes service station equipment, ATMs, telecommunications equipment, medical equipment, pumps, emergency electric generators, combined heat and power in commercial buildings, and manufacturing performed in commercial buildings. 6) Energy adjustment EIA uses to relieve discrepancies between data sources. Energy attributable to the commercial buildings sector, but not directly to specific end-uses.
System for AEO 2008, Mar. 2008; BTS/A.D. Little, Energy Consumption Characteristics of Commercial Building HVAC Systems, Volume II: Thermal Distribution, Auxiliary Equipment, and Ventilation, Oct. 1999, p. 1-2 and 5-25 - 5-26; EIA, AEO 1998, Dec. 1997, Table A5, p. 108-109 for 1995 ventilation; and BTP/Navigant Consulting, U.S. Lighting Market Characterization, Volume I, Sept. 2002, Table 8-2, p. 63; EIA, Supplement to the AEO 2008, April 2008, Table 22.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Tables A2, p. 117-119, Table A5, p. 124-125, and Table A17, p. 143-144; EIA, National Energy Modeling
Lighting 25%
Computers 4% Refrigeration 4%
Water Heating 6% Ventilation 7%
Electronics 7%
3-76
October 2009
0.23
0.04
Other Renw. Site LPG Fuel(2) En.(3) Electric 1.12 0.10 0.14 0.55 0.50 0.03 0.15 0.25 0.23 0.19 0.04 0.09 0.05 0.13 0.76 0.79 0.09 0.15 0.16 4.73
Site Total Percent 1.12 13.0% 1.76 20.4% 0.55 6.4% 0.52 6.0% 0.76 8.8% 0.25 2.9% 0.23 2.7% 0.19 2.2% 0.28 3.3% 1.26 14.6% 1.71 19.7% 8.64 100%
| | | | | | | | | | | |
Primary Electric (4) 3.53 0.43 1.73 1.56 0.48 0.80 0.73 0.60 0.12 2.38 2.49 14.85
Primary Total Percent 3.53 18.8% 2.06 11.0% 1.73 9.2% 1.58 8.4% 1.09 5.8% 0.80 4.3% 0.73 3.9% 0.60 3.2% 0.36 1.9% 2.89 15.4% 3.40 18.1% 18.77 100%
1) Includes (0.38 quad) distillate fuel oil and (0.10 quad) residual fuel oil. 2) Kerosene (0.02 quad) and coal (0.08 quad) are assumed attributable to space heating. Motor gasoline (0.05 quad) assumed attributable to other end-uses. 3) Comprised of (0.13 quad) biomass, (0.03 quad) solar water heating, and (less than 0.01 quad) solar PV. 4) Site -to-source electricity conversion (due to generation and transmission losses) = 3.14. 5) Includes service station equipment, ATMs, telecommunications equipment, medical equipment, pumps, emergency electric generators, combined heat and power in commercial buildings, and manufacturing performed in commercial buildings. 6) Energy adjustment EIA uses to relieve discrepancies between data sources. Energy attributable to the commercial buildings sector, but not directly to specific end-uses.
System for AEO 2008, Mar. 2008; EIA, Supplement to the AEO 2008, April 2008, Table 22.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Tables A2, p. 117-119, Table A5, p. 124-125, and Table A17, p. 143-144; EIA, National Energy Modeling
3.1.6
2020 Commercial Energy End-Use Splits, by Fuel Type (Quadrillion Btu) Natural Fuel Gas Oil (1) Other Renw. Site LPG Fuel(2) En.(3) Electric 1.22 0.79 0.10 0.14 0.55 0.03 0.16 0.30 0.25 0.21 0.04 0.09 0.05 0.13 1.13 0.88 0.09 0.15 0.16 5.67 Site Total Percent 1.22 12.1% 0.79 7.9% 1.90 18.8% 0.57 5.6% 0.89 8.8% 0.30 3.0% 0.25 2.5% 0.21 2.1% 0.33 3.3% 1.70 16.9% 1.90 18.9% 10.06 100% Primary Electric (4) 3.79 2.46 0.45 1.70 0.50 0.93 0.79 0.65 0.12 3.51 2.74 17.63 Primary Total Percent 3.79 17.2% 2.46 11.2% 2.20 10.0% 1.72 7.8% 1.23 5.6% 0.93 4.2% 0.79 3.6% 0.65 3.0% 0.41 1.8% 4.09 18.6% 3.76 17.1% 22.02 100%
Lighting Electronics Space Heating Space Cooling Water Heating Computers Refrigeration Ventilation Cooking Other (5) Adjust to SEDS (6) Total
Note(s):
0.25 0.05
| | | | | | | | | | | |
1) Includes (0.41 quad) distillate fuel oil and (0.10 quad) residual fuel oil. 2) Kerosene (0.02 quad) and coal (0.08 quad) are assumed attributable to space heating. Motor gasoline (0.05 quad) assumed attributable to other end-uses. 3) Comprised of (0.16 quad) biomass, (0.03 quad) solar water heating, and (less than 0.01 quad) solar PV. 4) Site -to-source electricity conversion (due to generation and transmission losses) = 3.11. 5) Includes service station equipment, ATMs, telecommunications equipment, medical equipment, pumps, emergency electric generators, combined heat and power in commercial buildings, and manufacturing performed in commercial buildings. 6) Energy adjustment EIA uses to relieve discrepancies between data sources. Energy attributable to the commercial buildings sector, but not directly to specific end-uses.
System for AEO 2008, Mar. 2008; EIA, Supplement to the AEO 2008, April 2008, Table 22.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Tables A2, p. 117-119, Table A5, p. 124-125, and Table A17, p. 143-144; EIA, National Energy Modeling
3-77
October 2009
0.25 0.05
Other Renw. Site LPG Fuel(2) En.(3) Electric 1.34 0.92 0.10 0.15 0.61 0.03 0.16 0.35 0.28 0.23 0.04 0.09 0.05 0.14 1.57 0.97 0.09 0.15 0.17 6.62
Site Total Percent 1.34 11.9% 0.92 8.1% 1.92 16.9% 0.63 5.6% 0.97 8.6% 0.35 3.1% 0.28 2.5% 0.23 2.0% 0.36 3.2% 2.28 20.1% 2.05 18.1% 11.34 100%
| | | | | | | | | | | |
Primary Electric (4) 4.12 2.81 0.45 1.88 0.50 1.08 0.86 0.71 0.11 4.80 2.99 20.30
Primary Total Percent 4.12 16.5% 2.81 11.2% 2.22 8.9% 1.90 7.6% 1.31 5.2% 1.08 4.3% 0.86 3.4% 0.71 2.8% 0.43 1.7% 5.52 22.1% 4.06 16.2% 25.02 100%
1) Includes (0.41 quad) distillate fuel oil and (0.10 quad) residual fuel oil. 2) Kerosene (0.02 quad) and coal (0.08 quad) are assumed attributable to space heating. Motor gasoline (0.05 quad) assumed attributable to other end-uses. 3) Comprised of (0.17 quad) biomass, (0.03 quad) solar water heating, and (0.01 quad) solar PV. 4) Site -to-source electricity conversion (due to generation and transmission losses) = 3.07. 5) Includes service station equipment, ATMs, telecommunications equipment, medical equipment, pumps, emergency electric generators, combined heat and power in commercial buildings, and manufacturing performed in commercial buildings. 6) Energy adjustment EIA uses to relieve discrepancies between data sources. Energy attributable to the commercial buildings sector, but not directly to specific end-uses.
System for AEO 2008, Mar. 2008; EIA, Supplement to the AEO 2008, April 2008, Table 22.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Tables A2, p. 117-119, Table A5, p. 124-125, and Table A17, p. 143-144; EIA, National Energy Modeling
3.1.8
Commercial Delivered Energy Consumption Intensities, by Vintage Consumption per Square Foot (thousand Btu/SF) 84.4 23% 91.5 12% 97.0 18% 100.0 19% 90.3 19% 81.6 8% 91.0
Year Constructed Prior to 1960 1960 to 1969 1970 to 1979 1980 to 1989 1990 to 1999 2000 to 2003 Average
Source(s): EIA, 2003 Commercial Buildings Energy Consumption and Expenditures: Consumption and Expenditures Tables, Oct. 2006, Table C1a.
3.1.9
2003 Commercial Delivered Energy Consumption Intensities, by Principal Building Type and Vintage (1) | | | | | | | | | | | Consumption (thousand Btu/SF) Pre-1959 1960-1989 1990-2003 77.72 88.32 80.6 62.44 85.98 74.8 145.2 290.1 361.2 46.65 39.91 43.3 N.A. 101.3 110.6 N.A. 38.86 33.3 61.86 107.6 119.7 21.44 23.15 N.A. 161.3 204.9 125.3
Consumption (thousand Btu/SF) Building Type Pre-1959 1960-1989 1990-2003 Health Care 178.1 216 135.7 Inpatient 230.3 255.3 253.8 Outpatient 91.6 110.4 84.4 Food Sales 205.8 197.6 198.3 Lodging 88.2 111.5 88.1 Office 93.6 94.4 88.0 Mercantile 80.4 91.8 94.4 Retail (Non-Malls) 74.1 63.7 86.4 Retail (Malls) N.A. 103.9 99.5
Note(s):
Building Type Education Service Food Service Religious Worship Public Order & Safety Warehouse & Storage Public Assembly Vacant Other
Source(s): EIA, 2003 Commercial Buildings Energy Consumption and Expenditures: Consumption and Expenditures Tables, Oct. 2006, Table C12a.
3-78
October 2009
Consumption Building Type (thousand Btu/SF) Health Care 345.9 Inpatient 438.8 Outpatient 205.9 Food Sales 535.5 Lodging 193.1 Office 211.7 Mercantile 223.6 Retail (Non-Malls) 172.6 Enclosed & Strip Malls 255.6
Consumption Percent of Total Building Type (thousand Btu/SF) Consumption Education 159.0 11% Service 151.6 4% Food Service 522.4 6% Religious Worship 76.98 2% Public Order and Safety 221.1 2% Warehouse and Storage 94.26 7% Public Assembly 180 5% Vacant 33.11 1% Other 318.8 4%
Source(s): EIA, 2003 Commercial Buildings Energy Consumption and Expenditures: Consumption and Expenditures Tables, Oct. 2006, Table C1a.
3.1.11
2003 Commercial Delivered Energy Consumption Intensities, by Ownership of Unit (1) Consumption (thousand Btu/SF) 85.1 72% 87.3 35% 88.4 36% 105.3 28% 100%
Note(s):
1) Mall buildings are no longer included in most CBECs tables; therefore, some data is not directly comparable to past CBECs.
Source(s): EIA, 2003 Commercial Buildings Energy Consumption and Expenditures: Consumption and Expenditures Tables, June 2006, Table C3.
3.1.12
Aggregate Commercial Building Component Loads as of 1998 (1) Loads (quads) and Percent of Total Loads Heating Cooling -0.103 12% 0.014 1% -0.174 21% -0.008 -0.093 11% -0.058 -0.152 18% -0.041 -0.129 15% -0.045 -0.188 22% -0.085 0.114 0.386 32% 0.196 0.048 0.001 0.038 -0.442 100% 0.505 42% 0.207 17% 0.006 1% 0.082 0.068 0.963 100%
Component Roof Walls (2) Foundation Infiltration Ventilation Windows (conduction) Windows (solar gain) Internal Gains Lights Equipment (electrical) Equip. (non-electrical) People NET Load
Note(s):
1) Loads represents the thermal energy losses/gains that, when combined, will be offset by a building's heating/cooling system to maintain a set interior temperature (which then equals site energy). 2) Includes common interior walls between buildings.
Source(s): LBNL, Commercial Heating and Cooling Loads Component Analysis, June 1998, Table 24, p. 45 and Figure 3, p. 61.
3.1.13
2003 Commercial Buildings Delivered Energy End-Use Intensities, by Building Activity (Thousand Btu per SF) (1) Education 39.4 8.0 8.4 5.8 11.5 0.8 1.6 Food Sales 28.9 9.8 5.9 2.9 36.7 8.6 94.8 Food Service 43.1 17.4 14.8 40.4 25.4 63.5 42.1 Health Care 70.4 14.1 13.3 30.2 33.1 3.5 2.6 Inpatient 91.8 18.6 20.0 48.4 40.1 5.6 2.0 Outpatient 38.1 7.2 3.3 2.5 22.6 N.A. 3.5 Lodging 22.2 4.9 2.7 31.4 24.3 3.2 2.3
3-79
October 2009
N.A. 7.0 1.3 100.0 Public Order and Safety 49.9 8.9 9.5 14.0 16.5 1.3 2.9 0.6 10.6 1.6 115.8
Space Heating Cooling Ventilation Water Heating Lighting Cooking Refrigeration Office Equipment Computers Other Total
Mercantile 24.0 9.9 6.0 5.1 27.5 2.3 4.4 0.7 10.3 1.1 91.3 Religious Worship 26.2 2.9 1.4 0.8 4.4 0.8 1.7 0.1 4.9 0.3 43.5
Service 35.9 3.8 6.0 1.0 15.6 N.A. 2.1 0.3 11.4 1.0 77.0 Warehouse and Storage 19.3 1.3 2.0 0.6 13.1 N.A. 3.5 0.2 4.8 0.6 45.2
Office 32.8 8.9 5.2 2.0 23.1 0.3 2.9 2.6 9.0 6.1 92.9
Space Heating Cooling Ventilation Water Heating Lighting Cooking Refrigeration Office Equipment Computers Other Total
Note(s):
Other 79.4 10.5 6.1 2.1 34.1 N.A. 6.0 N.A. 18.9 3.0 164.4
Vacant 14.4 0.6 0.4 0.1 1.7 N.A. N.A. N.A. 3.1 N.A. 20.9
Source(s): EIA, 2003 Commercial Building Energy Consumption Survey, Energy End-Uses, Oct 2008, Table E.2A.
3.1.14
Commercial Buildings Share of U.S. Natural Gas Consumption (Percent) U.S. Natural Gas Primary Consumption Total Commercial Industry Transportation (quads) 18% 49% 3% 20.38 19% 49% 3% 19.75 21% 47% 3% 23.80 23% 43% 3% 22.30 23% 43% 3% 23.93 24% 42% 3% 24.35 24% 41% 3% 24.01 25% 41% 3% 23.66 25% 41% 3% 23.39
Commercial 1980 13% 1990 14% 2000 14% 2006(1) 13% 2010 13% 2015 14% 2020 14% 2025 15% 2030 16%
Note(s):
Site Consumption Industry Electric Gen. Transportation 41% 19% 3% 43% 17% 3% 40% 22% 3% 35% 29% 3% 35% 29% 3% 35% 28% 3% 35% 25% 3% 36% 23% 3% 36% 22% 3%
| | | | | | | | |
1) Buildings accounted for 58% (or $97 billion) of total U.S. natural gas expenditures.
p. 117-119 for 2006-2030 consumption, Table A3, p. 120-121 for 2006 expenditures.
Source(s): EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Consumption, Feb. 2008, Tables 8-12, p. 18-22 for 1980-2000; and EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2,
3.1.15
Commercial Buildings Share of U.S. Petroleum Consumption (Percent) U.S. Petroleum Total (quads) 34.2
1980
Buildings 4%
3-80
October 2009
26% 25% 25% 24% 23% 22% 22% 21% 64% 67% 69% 70% 71% 72% 73% 73% 33.6 38.4 40.1 40.5 41.8 42.2 42.8 44.0
3% 2% 2% 2% 2% 2% 2% 2%
4% 3% 2% 1% 1% 1% 1% 1%
| | | | | | | |
4% 3% 2% 2% 2% 2% 2% 2%
1) Buildings accounted for an estimated 7.3% (or $30 billion) of total U.S. petroleum expenditures.
p. 117-119 for 2006-2030 consumption, Table A3, p. 120-121 for 2006 expenditures.
Source(s): EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Consumption, Feb. 2008, Tables 8-12, p. 18-22 for 1980-2000; and EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2,
3-81
October 2009
1980 1990 2000 (4) 2006 (4) 2010 (4) 2015 (4) 2020 (4) 2025 (4) 2030 (4)
Note(s):
Buildings (10^6) 3.1 (3) 4.5 (3) 4.7 (5) N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A.
1) Based on PNNL calculations. 2) Percent built after Dec. 31, 2000. 3) Actually for previous year. 4) EIA now excludes parking garages and commercial buildings on multi-building manufacturing facilities from the commercial building sector. 5) Data is from 1999. In 1999, commercial building floorspace = 67.3 billion square feet.
floorspace; EIA, AEO 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A5, p. 124-142 for 2005-2030 floorspace; EIA Commercial Building Characteristics 1989, June 1991, Table A4, p. 17 for 1990 number of buildings; EIA, Commercial Building Characteristics 1999, Aug. 2002, Table 3 for 1999 number of buildings and floorspace; and EIA, Buildings and Energy in the 1980s, June 1995, Table 2.1, p. 23 for number of buildings in 1980.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 1994, Jan. 1994, Table A5, p. 62 for 1990 floorspace; EIA, AEO 2003, Jan. 2003, Table A5, p. 127-128 for 2000
3.2.2
Principal Commercial Building Types, as of 2003 (Percent of Total Floorspace) (1) Total Floorspace 17% 16% 6% 10% 14% 14% 7% 6% 5% 5% 4% 3% 2% 2% 2% 2% 2% 4% 100% Total Buildings 17% 14% 9% 4% 8% 12% 3% 13% 6% 8% 3% 0% 2% 5% 6% 1% 2% 4% 100% Primary Energy Consumption 19% 18% 5% 13% 11% 7% 7% 4% 5% 2% 8% 6% 2% 5% 6% 2% 4% 1% 100%
Office Mercantile Retail Enclosed & Strip Malls Education Warehouse and Storage Lodging Service Public Assembly Religious Worship Health Care Inpatient Outpatient Food Sales Food Service Public Order and Safety Other Vacant Total
Note(s):
1) For primary energy intensities by building type, see Table 3.1.13. Total CBECS 2003 commercial building floorspace is 71.7 billion SF.
Source(s): EIA, 2003 Commercial Buildings Energy Consumption Survey: Consumption and Expenditures Tables, Oct. 2006, Table C1A.
3-82
October 2009
Source(s): EIA, Commercial Building Characteristics 2003, June 2006, Table C1.
Share of Commercial Floorspace, by Census Region and Vintage, as of 2003 (Percent) Prior to 1960 9% 8% 5% 3% 1960 to 1989 8% 11% 18% 9% 1990 to 2003 3% 6% 14% 5% Total 20% 25% 37% 18% 100%
Source(s): EIA, 2003 Commercial Buildings Energy Consumption Survey: Building Characteristics Tables, Oct. 2006, Table A2, p. 3-4.
3.2.5
Commercial Building Size, as of 2003 (Number of Buildings and Percent of Total Floorspace) Number of Buildings (thousands) 2,586 10% 948 10% 810 18% 261 13% 147 14% 74 14% 26 10% 8 11% 4,859 100%
Square Foot Range 1,001 to 5,000 5,001 to 10,000 10,001 to 25,000 25,001 to 50,000 50,001 to 100,000 100,001 to 200,000 (2) 200,001 to 500,000 (2) Over 500,000 (2) Total
Note(s):
1) 35% of commercial floorspace is found in 2.2% of commercial buildings that are larger than 100,000 square feet.
Source(s): EIA, 2003 Commercial Buildings Energy Consumption Survey: Building Characteristics Tables, Oct. 2006, Table A1, p. 1-2.
3.2.6
Commercial Building Vintage, as of 2003 Percent of Total Floorspace 5% 10% 10% 12% 17% 17% 20% 9% 100%
1919 or Before 1920 to 1945 1946 to 1959 1960 to 1969 1970 to 1979 1980 to 1989 1990 to 1999 2000 to 2003 Total
Source(s): EIA, 2003 Commercial Buildings Energy Consumption Survey: Building Characteristics Tables, Oct. 2006, Table A1, p. 1-2.
3-83
October 2009
Building Type Median (1) Health Care 65 Food Sales 65 Food Service 65 Lodging 69 Mercantile & Service 65 Assembly 80 Large Office 73 Small Office 73 Education 80 Warehouse 80 Other 75
Note(s):
1) PNNL estimates the median lifetime of commercial buildings is 70-75 years. 2) Number of years after which the building survives. For example, a third of the office buildings constructed today will survive 103 years later.
Demand Module of the National Energy Modeling System, Apr. 2008, p. 30-35; and PNNL, Memorandum: New Construction in the Annual Energy Outlook 2003, Apr. 24, 2003 for Note 2.
Source(s): EIA, Assumptions for the Annual Energy Outlook 2008, June 2008, Table 12, p. 32; EIA, Model Documentation Report: Commercial Sector
3.2.8
2003 Average Commercial Building Floorspace, by Principal Building Type and Vintage Average Floorspace/Building (thousand SF) 1959 or Prior 1960 to 1989 1990 to 2003 All 27.5 26.9 21.7 25.6 N.A. N.A. N.A. 5.6 6.4 4.4 5.0 5.6 18.5 37.1 N.A. 24.5 N.A. 243.6 N.A. 238.1 N.A. 11.3 11.6 10.4 9.9 36.1 36.0 35.9 6.2 9.3 17.5 9.7 12.4 16.4 14.2 14.8 13.0 13.8 17.3 14.2 N.A. N.A. N.A. 15.4 8.7 9.6 15.6 10.1 6.1 6.5 6.8 6.5 19.7 17.2 15.4 16.9 N.A. N.A. N.A. 22.0 N.A. N.A. N.A. 14.1
Building Type Education Food Sales Food Service Health Care Inpatient Outpatient Lodging Retail (Other Than Mall) Office Public Assembly Public Order and Safety Religious Worship Service Warehouse and Storage Other Vacant
Source(s): EIA, 2003 Commercial Buildings Energy Consumption Survey: Building Characteristics Tables, June 2006, Table B8, p. 63-69, and Table B9, p. 70-76.
3-84
October 2009
1) Residential petroleum products include distillate fuel, LPG, and kerosene. 2) Commercial petroleum products include distillate fuel, LPG, kerosene, motor gasoline, and residual fuel.
p. 18-19 for 1980-2005 consumption; EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008 Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119, Table A3, p. 120-121, Table A12, p. 138, and Table A13, p. 139 for 2006-2030 consumption and prices; and EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for price deflators.
Source(s): EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Prices and Expenditures, Feb. 2008, Tables 2-3, p. 24-25 for 1980-2005 and prices for note, Tables 8-9,
3.3.2
Commercial Energy Prices, by Year and Fuel Type ($2006) Electricity (/kWh) 11.81 10.33 8.55 9.47 9.52 8.71 8.75 8.77 8.93 Natural Gas (/therm) 71.63 67.12 76.39 115.03 105.95 96.75 99.06 104.67 114.32 Distillate Oil ($/gal) 1.33 0.73 0.78 1.29 1.51 1.19 1.19 1.29 1.38 Residual Oil ($/gal) 1.93 1.18 1.21 2.02 2.11 1.79 1.84 1.92 2.08
Source(s): EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Prices and Expenditures, Feb. 2008, p. Tables 2-3, p. 24-25 for 1980-2005; EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A3, p. 120-121 for 2006-2030 and Table G1, p. 215 for fuels' heat content; and EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for price deflators.
3.3.3
Buildings Aggregate Energy Expenditures, by Year and Major Fuel Type ($2006 Billion) (1) Electricity 66.0 86.6 99.2 123.1 131.9 132.6 145.3 158.1 173.3 Natural Gas Petroleum (2) 19.1 15.7 18.1 8.1 24.9 7.1 33.6 10.0 32.3 9.8 31.9 8.9 34.4 9.2 38.0 9.7 43.2 10.4 Total 100.7 112.8 131.2 166.7 173.9 173.3 188.9 205.8 226.9
1) Expenditures exclude wood and coal. 2006 U.S. energy expenditures were 1.14 trillion. 2) Commercial petroleum products include distillate fuel oil, LPG, kerosene, motor gasoline, and residual fuel.
p. 117-119 and Table A3, p. 120-121 for 2006-2030; and EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for price deflators.
Source(s): EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Prices and Expenditures, Feb. 2008, p. 24-25 for 1980-2005; EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2,
3-85
October 2009
Petroleum Distil. Resid. LPG Oth(2) Total 1.8 1.0 0.3 3.1
0.7
0.7
1.0 1.3
0.1
Electricity 38.8 5.5 19.1 11.7 4.4 9.6 6.4 6.0 1.1 15.8 4.6 123.0
Total 38.8 22.3 19.3 11.7 11.4 9.6 6.4 6.0 3.7 21.9 15.6 166.7
Percent 23.3% 13.4% 11.6% 7.0% 6.8% 5.7% 3.8% 3.6% 2.2% 13.1% 9.3% 100%
1) Expenditures include coal and exclude wood. 2) Includes kerosene space heating ($0.3 billion) and motor gasoline other uses ($1.0 billion). 3) Coal average price is from AEO 2008, all users price. 4) Includes service station equipment, ATMs, medical equipment, telecommunications equipment, pumps, lighting, emergency electric generators, and manufacturing performed in commercial buildings. 5) Expenditures related to an energy adjustment EIA uses to relieve discrepancies between data sources. Energy attributable to the commercial buildings sector, but not directly to specific end-uses.
consumption; EIA, National Energy Modeling System for AEO 2008, Mar. 2008; EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Prices and Expenditures, Feb. 2008, p. 25 for coal price; EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for price deflators; BTS/A.D. Little, Energy Consumption Characteristics of Commercial Building HVAC Systems, Volume II: Thermal Distribution, Auxiliary Equipment, and Ventilation Oct. 1999, p. 1-2, 5-25 and 5-26 for ventilation; and BTP/Navigant Consulting, U.S. Lighting Market Characterization, Volume I, Sept. 2002, Table 8-2, p. 63.; EIA, Supplement to the AEO 2008, April 2008, Table 22.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119, Table A3, p. 120-121 for prices, and Table A5, p. 124-125 for energy
Other, 21.88
Electronics, 11.41
3-86
October 2009
Petroleum Distil. Resid. LPG Oth(2) Total 2.0 1.0 0.3 3.3
0.7
0.7
1.1 1.3
0.2
Electricity 31.3 3.8 15.4 13.9 4.3 7.1 6.5 5.3 1.1 21.1 22.1 131.9
Total 31.3 21.0 15.4 14.1 10.6 7.1 6.5 5.3 3.7 26.5 32.6 174.1
Percent 18.0% 12.0% 8.8% 8.1% 6.1% 4.1% 3.7% 3.0% 2.1% 15.2% 18.7% 100%
1) Expenditures include coal and exclude wood. 2) Includes kerosene space heating ($0.3 billion) and motor gasoline other uses ($1.1 billion). 3) Coal average price is from AEO 2008, all users price. 4) Includes service station equipment, ATMs, medical equipment, telecommunications equipment, pumps, lighting, emergency electric generators, and manufacturing performed in commercial buildings. 5) Expenditures related to an energy adjustment EIA uses to relieve discrepancies between data sources. Energy attributable to the commercial buildings sector, but not directly to specific end-uses.
consumption; EIA, National Energy Modeling System for AEO 2008, Mar. 2008; EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for price deflators; EIA, Supplement to the AEO 2008, April 2008, Table 22.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119, Table A3, p. 120-121 for prices, and Table A5, p. 124-125 for energy
3.3.6
2020 Commercial Energy End-Use Expenditure Splits, by Fuel Type ($2006 Billion) (1) Natural Gas Petroleum Distil. Resid. LPG Oth(2) Total 2.0 0.8 0.2 3.0
Lighting Space Heating Electronics Space Cooling Water Heating Computers Refrigeration Ventilation Cooking Other (4) Adjust to SEDS (5) Total
Note(s):
0.6
0.6
1.0 1.3
0.1
Electricity 31.2 3.7 20.3 14.0 4.1 7.7 6.5 5.4 1.0 28.9 22.6 145.3
Total 31.2 20.7 20.3 14.2 11.2 7.7 6.5 5.4 3.8 34.7 33.4 189.1
Percent 16.5% 11.0% 10.7% 7.5% 5.9% 4.1% 3.4% 2.8% 2.0% 18.3% 17.7% 100%
1) Expenditures include coal and exclude wood. 2) Includes kerosene space heating ($0.2 billion) and motor gasoline other uses ($1.0 billion). 3) Coal average price is from AEO 2008, all users price. 4) Includes service station equipment, ATMs, medical equipment, telecommunications equipment, pumps, lighting, emergency electric generators, and manufacturing performed in commercial buildings. 5) Expenditures related to an energy adjustment EIA uses to relieve discrepancies between data sources. Energy attributable to the commercial buildings sector, but not directly to specific end-uses.
consumption; EIA, National Energy Modeling System for AEO 2008, Mar. 2008; EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for price deflators; EIA, Supplement to the AEO 2008, April 2008, Table 22.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119, Table A3, p. 120-121 for prices, and Table A5, p. 124-125 for energy
3-87
October 2009
Coal (3)
2.3 0.8
0.9
0.3
3.5 0.8
0.1
1.1 1.4
0.1
Electricity 35.2 24.0 3.9 16.0 4.2 9.2 7.3 6.1 0.9 41.0 25.5 173.3
Total 35.2 24.0 23.7 16.2 13.4 9.2 7.3 6.1 4.7 48.9 38.5 227.1
Percent 15.5% 10.6% 10.4% 7.2% 5.9% 4.1% 3.2% 2.7% 2.0% 21.5% 16.9% 100%
1) Expenditures include coal and exclude wood. 2) Includes kerosene space heating ($0.3 billion) and motor gasoline other uses ($1.1 billion). 3) Coal average price is from AEO 2008, all users price. 4) Includes service station equipment, ATMs, medical equipment, telecommunications equipment, pumps, lighting, emergency electric generators, and manufacturing performed in commercial buildings. 5) Expenditures related to an energy adjustment EIA uses to relieve discrepancies between data sources. Energy attributable to the commercial buildings sector, but not directly to specific end-uses.
consumption; EIA, National Energy Modeling System for AEO 2008, March 2008; EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for price deflators; EIA, Supplement to the AEO 2008, April 2008, Table 22.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119, Table A3, p. 120-121 for prices, and Table A5, p. 124-125 for energy
3.3.8 Year 1980(1) 1990 2000 2006 2010 2015 2020 2025 2030
Note(s):
Average Annual Energy Expenditures per Square Foot of Commercial Floorspace, by Year ($2006) ($/SF) 1.96 1.83 1.91 2.30 2.28 2.13 2.18 2.24 2.32
1) End of year 1979. p. 117-119 and Table A5, p. 124-125 for consumption, Table A3, p. 120-121 for prices for 2006-2030; EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for price deflators; EIA, AEO 1994, Jan. 1994, Table A5, p. 62 for 1990 floorspace; and PNNL for 1980 floorspace.
Source(s): EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Prices and Expenditures, Feb. 2008, p. 25 for 1980-2005; EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2,
3.3.9
2003 Energy Expenditures per Square Foot of Commercial Floorspace and per Building, by Building Type ($2006) (1) Per Building (thousand) 25.3 24.2 63.3 29.8 27.7 22.9 57.3 Per Building (thousand) 35.5 34.1 8.4 12.6 7.2 4.5 61.0
Per Square Foot Food Service 4.54 Food Sales 4.36 Health Care 2.57 Public Order and Safety 1.93 Office 1.87 Public Assembly 1.61 Lodging 1.60
Note(s):
Per Square Foot Mercantile 2.08 Education 1.34 Service 1.29 Warehouse and Storage 0.74 Religious Worship 0.71 Vacant 0.32 Other 2.78
1) Mall buildings are no longer included in most CBECs tables; therefore, some data is not directly comparable to past CBECs.
Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for price deflators.
Source(s): EIA, 2003 Commercial Buildings Energy Consumption and Expenditures: Consumption and Expenditures Tables, Oct. 2006, Table 4; and EIA,
3-88
October 2009
Vintage Prior to 1960 1960 to 1969 1970 to 1979 1980 to 1989 1990 to 1999 2000 to 2003 Average
Source(s): EIA, 2003 Commercial Buildings Energy Consumption and Expenditures: Consumption and Expenditures Tables, Table C4; and EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for price inflators.
3-89
October 2009
Electricity 409 563 780 832 864 945 1024 1117 1216
Total 653 788 1015 1045 1079 1176 1265 1367 1474
Total 4723 5012 5847 5890 6011 6226 6384 6571 6851
Com.% Com.% of Total U.S. of Total Global 14% 3.6% 16% 3.7% 17% 4.3% 18% 3.7% 18% 3.5% 19% 3.5% 20% 3.4% 21% 3.4% 22% 3.4%
1) Excludes emissions of buildings-related energy consumption in the industrial sector. Emissions assume complete combustion from energy consumption and exclude energy production activities such as gas flaring, coal mining, and cement production. 2) Carbon emissions calculated from EIA, Assumptions to the AEO 2008 and differs from EIA, AEO 2008, Table A18. Buildings sector total varies by 0.7% from EIA, AEO 2008.
Gases in the U.S. 2003, Dec. 2004, Tables 7-11, p. 29-31 for 1990 and 2000; EIA, Assumptions to the Annual Energy Outlook 2008, April 2008, Table 2, p. 10 for carbon coefficients; EIA, AEO 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 137-139 for 2005-2030 energy consumption and Table A18, p. 164 for 2005-2030 emissions; EIA, International Energy Outlook 2008, July 2008, Table A10, p. 93 for 2004-2030 global emissions; and EIA, International Energy Annual 2006, July 2006, Table H1, www.eia.doe.gov for 1980-2000 global emission.
Source(s): EIA, Emissions of Greenhouse Gases in the U.S. 1985-1990, Sept. 1993, Appendix B, Tables B1-B5, p. 73-74 for 1980; EIA, Emissions of Greenhouse
Carbon Dioxide Emissions for U.S. Commercial Buildings (Million Metric Tons)
1200
1000
800
Site Fossil
600
400
Electricity
200 0 1980
1985
1990
1995
2000
2005
2010
2015
2020
2025
2030
Year
3-90
October 2009
Coal
1.1 62.7
9.2
8.9
1.2
19.4
8.1
29.1
3.5
3.5
3.5 4.7
8.1
Electricity (3) Total 263.1 263.1 129.2 130.3 37.3 127.4 79.3 79.3 64.9 64.9 29.8 62.4 43.4 43.4 40.3 40.3 7.4 19.6 107.0 131.6 30.8 82.5 832.414596 1044.734876
Percent 25.2% 12.5% 12.2% 7.6% 6.2% 6.0% 4.2% 3.9% 1.9% 12.6% 7.9% 100%
1) Emissions assume complete combustion from energy consumption, excluding gas flaring, coal mining, and cement production. Emissions exclude wood since it is assumed that the carbon released from combustion is reabsorbed in a future carbon cycle. Carbon emissions calculated from EIA, Assumptions to the AEO 2008 and differs from EIA, AEO 2008, Table A18. Buildings sector total varies by 0.7% from EIA, AEO 2008. 2) Includes kerosene space heating (1.2 MMT) and motor gasoline other uses (3.5 MMT). 3) Excludes electric imports by utilities. 4) Includes commercial service station equipment, ATMs, telecommunications equipment, medical equipment, pumps, emergency electric generators, and manufacturing performed in commercial buildings. 5) Emissions related to a discrepancy between data sources. Energy attributable to the buildings sector, but not directly to specific end-uses.
and Table A18, p. 143-144 for emissions; EIA, National Energy Modeling System for AEO 2008, Mar. 2008; EIA, Assumptions to the AEO 2008, April 2008, Table 2, p. 10 for emission coefficients; BTS/A.D. Little, Electricity Consumption by Small End-Uses in Residential Buildings, Aug. 1998, Appendix A for residential electric end-uses; BTS/A.D. Little, Energy Consumption Characteristics of Commercial Building HVAC Systems, Volume II: Thermal Distribution, Auxiliary Equipment, and Ventilation, Oct. 1999, p. 1-2; BTP/Navigant Consulting, U.S. Lighting Market Characterization, Volume I, Sept. 2002, Table 8-2, p.63; and EIA, AEO 1999, Dec. 1998, Table A4, p. 118-119 and Table A5, p. 120-121 for 1996 data.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119, Table A4, p. 122-123 and Table A5, p. 134-135 for energy consumption,
Electronics 8%
3-91
October 2009
Petroleum Distil. Resid. LPG Oth(2) Total 9.7 7.7 1.3 18.6
Coal 7.9
3.2
3.2
3.5 4.8
7.9
Electricity (3) Total 205.4 205.4 25.2 120.4 100.6 100.6 90.8 91.8 28.0 59.8 46.5 46.5 42.7 42.7 34.6 34.6 6.9 19.9 138.5 160.6 144.7 197.0 863.9125368 1079.34563
Percent 19.0% 11.2% 9.3% 8.5% 5.5% 4.3% 4.0% 3.2% 1.8% 14.9% 18.2% 100%
1) Emissions assume complete combustion from energy consumption, excluding gas flaring, coal mining, and cement production. Emissions exclude wood since it is assumed that the carbon released from combustion is reabsorbed in a future carbon cycle. 2) Includes kerosene space heating (1.3 MMT) and motor gasoline other uses (3.5 MMT). 3) Excludes electric imports by utilities. 4) Includes commercial service station equipment, ATMs, telecommunications equipment, medical equipment, pumps, emergency electric generators, and manufacturing performed in commercial buildings. 5) Emissions related to a discrepancy between data sources. Energy attributable to the buildings sector, but not directly to specific end-uses.
and Table A18, p. 143-144 for emissions; EIA, National Energy Modeling System for AEO 2008, Feb. 2008; EIA, Assumptions to the AEO 2008, April 2008, Table 2, p. 10 for emission coefficients.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119, Table A4, p. 122-123 and Table A5, p. 134-135 for energy consumption,
3.4.4
2020 Commercial Buildings Energy End-Use Carbon Dioxide Emissions Splits, by Fuel Type (Million Metric Tons) (1) Natural Gas Petroleum Distil. Resid. LPG Oth(2) Total
Coal
Lighting Electronics Space Heating Space Cooling Water Heating Computers Refrigeration Ventilation Cooking Other (4) Adjust to SEDS (5) Total
Note(s):
10.9 3.6
8.1
1.3
20.3 3.6
7.9
3.7 4.9
7.9
Electricity (3) 220.0 143.1 25.9 98.9 29.0 54.2 45.6 37.7 6.7 203.9 159.3 1024.3
Total 220.0 143.1 128.4 100.0 67.1 54.2 45.6 37.7 22.2 229.7 217.5 1265.4
Percent 17.4% 11.3% 10.1% 7.9% 5.3% 4.3% 3.6% 3.0% 1.8% 18.2% 17.2% 100%
1) Emissions assume complete combustion from energy consumption, excluding gas flaring, coal mining, and cement production. Emissions exclude wood since it is assumed that the carbon released from combustion is reabsorbed in a future carbon cycle. 2) Includes kerosene space heating (1.2 MMT) and motor gasoline other uses (3.7 MMT). 3) Excludes electric imports by utilities. 4) Includes commercial service station equipment, ATMs, telecommunications equipment, medical equipment, pumps, emergency electric generators, and manufacturing performed in commercial buildings. 5) Emissions related to a discrepancy between data sources. Energy attributable to the buildings sector, but not directly to specific end-uses.
and Table A18, p. 143-144 for emissions; EIA, National Energy Modeling System for AEO 2008, Feb. 2008; EIA, Assumptions to the AEO 2008, April 2008, Table 2, p. 10 for emission coefficients;
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119, Table A4, p. 122-123 and Table A5, p. 134-135 for energy consumption,
3-92
October 2009
Coal
11.0 3.7
8.1
1.3
20.5 3.7
7.9
3.8 5.1
7.9
Electricity (3) 246.9 168.2 27.2 112.4 29.7 64.8 51.4 42.4 6.6 287.8 179.0 1216.3
Total 246.9 168.2 130.7 113.4 72.2 64.8 51.4 42.4 23.8 320.6 239.9 1474.3
Percent 16.7% 11.4% 8.9% 7.7% 4.9% 4.4% 3.5% 2.9% 1.6% 21.7% 16.3% 100%
1) Emissions assume complete combustion from energy consumption, excluding gas flaring, coal mining, and cement production. Emissions exclude wood since it is assumed that the carbon released from combustion is reabsorbed in a future carbon cycle. 2) Includes kerosene space heating (1.3 MMT) and motor gasoline other uses (3.8 MMT). 3) Excludes electric imports by utilities. 4) Includes commercial service station equipment, ATMs, telecommunications equipment, medical equipment, pumps, emergency electric generators, and manufacturing performed in commercial buildings. 5) Emissions related to a discrepancy between data sources. Energy attributable to the buildings sector, but not directly to specific end-uses.
and Table A18, p. 143-144 for emissions; EIA, National Energy Modeling System for AEO 2008, Feb. 2008; EIA, Assumptions to the AEO 2008, April 2008, Table 2, p. 10 for emission coefficients.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119, Table A4, p. 122-123 and Table A5, p. 134-135 for energy consumption,
3.4.6
2006 Methane Emissions for U.S. Commercial Buildings Energy Production, by Fuel Type (MMT CO2 Equivalent) (1)
Fuel Type Petroleum Natural Gas Coal Wood Electricity (2) Total
Note(s):
1) Sources of emissions include oil and gas production, processing, and distribution; coal mining; and utility and site combustion. Carbon Dioxide equivalent units are calculated by converting methane emissions to carbon dioxide emissions (methane's global warming potential is 23 times that of carbon dioxide). 2) Emissions of electricity generators attributable to the buildings sector.
U.S. Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Sinks: 1990-2006, April 2008, Table 3-16, p. 3-25 for stationary combustion emissions; and EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119 for energy consumption.
Source(s): EIA, Emissions of Greenhouse Gases in the U.S. 2006, Nov. 2007, Table 15, p. 22 for energy production emissions; EPA, Inventory of
3-93
October 2009
Value of New Commercial Building Construction, by Year ($2006 Billion) 148.7 210.4 211.7 192.0 300.8 277.7 288.0 294.7 307.1
1) In 2006, new building construction accounted for 5.9% of the $13.2 trillion U.S. GDP.
Construction Put in Place, May 2008 for 1995-2006; and EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for price deflators.
Source(s): DOC, Current Construction Reports: Value of New Construction Put in Place, C30, Aug. 2003, Table 1 for 1980-1990; DOC, Annual Value of
3.5.2
Value of Building Improvements and Repairs, by Sector ($2006 Billion) (1) Improvements N.A. 82.6 82.8 105.8 142.6 131.7 136.6 139.8 145.6 Maintenance and Repairs N.A. 47.8 49.8 34.9 44.0 40.6 42.1 43.1 44.9 Total N.A. 130.4 (2) 132.6 (3) 140.6 186.6 172.3 178.7 182.9 190.5
1) Improvements includes additions, alterations, reconstruction, and major replacements. Repairs include maintenance. 2) 1986. 3) 1989.
1986-1990 expenditures; DOC, 1997 Census of Construction Industries: Industry Summary, Jan. 2000, Table 7, p. 15; DOC, Annual Value of Private Construction Put in Place, May 2008 for 1995-2006; and EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for GDP and price deflators.
Source(s): DOC, Current Construction Reports: Expenditures for Nonresidential Improvements and Repairs: 1992, CSS/92, Sept. 1994, Table A, p. 2 for
3-94
Buildings Energy Data Book: 3.6 Office Building Markets and Companies
3.6.1 2006 Energy Consumption per Square Foot of Office Floorspace by Vintage (Thousand Btu/SF) (1) Energy Intensity 90.9 79.3 78.6 76.8 N.A. 80.7
October 2009
415
3.6.2
Energy Expenditures per Square Foot of Office Floorspace by Building Age ($2006) (1) 2006 1.99 2.18 2.23 2.52 2.78 2.36 2.26 2004 1.73 1.89 1.84 2.18 2.76 1.96 1.83
Age (years) 0-9 10-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50+ All Buildings
Note(s):
1) Energy includes electric, gas, fuel oil, purchased steam, purchased chilled water, and water/sewage expenditures.
Source(s): BOMA International, The Experience Exchange Report 2007, August 2007; BOMA International, The Experience Exchange Report 2005; August 2005.
3.6.3
Energy Consumption and Expenditures per Square Foot of Office Floorspace, by Function and Class (1) 2006 Energy Intensity Energy (thousand Btu/SF) Expenditures ($/SF) 90.8 2.39 N.A. 2.91 96.8 2.56 81.9 2.28 74.9 2.15 N.A. 2.28 81.1 2.26 2004 Energy Intensity Energy (thousand Btu/SF) Expenditures ($/SF) N.A. 2.19 N.A. 3.09 89.4 2.53 78.8 1.94 N.A. 1.89 N.A. 1.71 77.8 1.95
Medical Offices Financial Offices Corporate Facilities(2) Class A Class B Class C All Buildings
Note(s):
1) Categories are not mutually exclusive. 2) Coporate Facilities are any building that the owner occupies atleast 75% of the rentable space.
Source(s): BOMA International, The Experience Exchange Report 2007, August 2007; BOMA International, The Experience Exchange Report 2005; August 2005.
3-95
Buildings Energy Data Book: 3.6 Office Building Markets and Companies
3.6.4
October 2009
2006 Energy Expenditures per Square Foot of Office Floorspace for Selected Cities by Location ($2006/SF) (1) Urban 3.99 2.14 1.51 2.64 1.88 2.40 1.87 2.75 2.37 2.78 2.68 2.93 2.79 1.18 3.31 2.32 Suburban N.A. 2.36 N.A. 2.35 1.80 2.73 1.96 2.81 2.31 2.01 1.43 2.93 N.A. 1.92 3.57 2.18
New York, NY Los Angeles, CA Chicago, IL Houston, TX Phoenix, AZ Philadelphia, PA San Antonio, CA San Diego, CA Dallas, TX San Jose, CA San Francisco, CA Miami, FL Washington, DC Seatle, WA Boston, MA National Average (2)
Note(s):
1) Energy includes electric, gas, fuel oil, purchased steam, purchased chilled water, and water/sewage expenditures. 2) Averages based on 831 urban respondents and 1788 suburban respondents across 94 US cities.
Source(s): BOMA International, The Experience Exchange Report 2007, August 2007.
3.6.5
Top 10 Office Building Owners Globally as of Year End, 2006 (Million SF) Square Footaged Owned 76.0 53.9 49.0 46.0 44.2 43.3 42.0 39.2 38.4 33.9 465.9
Owner Brookfield Properties Corp. Tishman Speyer LasSalle Investment Management Hines TIAA-CREF Boston Properties HRPT Properties Trust Wells Real Estate Funds CB Richards Ellis Investors LLC Mack-Cali Realty Corp. Total for Top 10:
Source(s): National Real Estate Investor, The Best of The Best: National Real Estate Investor Presents its Annual Rankings of the Leading Commercial Real Estate Companies, July 2007, p. 10.
3.6.6
Top 10 Property Managers Globally as of Year End, 2006 (Million SF) Square Footaged Owned 1,700 1,000 829 445 422 221 211 211 200 193
Managing Company CB Richard Ellis Jones Lang LaSalle Colliers International Cushman & Wakefield ProLogis Lincoln Property Co. Simon Property Group Grubb & Ellis Co. NAI Global ING Clarion
Source(s): National Real Estate Investor, The Best of The Best: National Real Estate Investor Presents its Annual Rankings of the Leading Commercial Real Estate Companies, July 2007, p. 24.
3-96
Buildings Energy Data Book: 3.6 Office Building Markets and Companies
3.6.7 Advanced Energy Design Guide for Small Office Buildings (1)
October 2009
Shell Percent Glass (WWR) Window U-Factor SHGC Wall R-Value Roof R-Value Attic Insulation Above Deck Wall Material Lighting Average Power Density (Watts/SF) System and Plant System and Plant Packaged Single-Zone Packaged Single-Zone w/ Economizer Heating Plant: Gas Furnace Cooling Plant: Air conditioner (135-240 thousand Btu*hr.) Service Hot Water: Gas Water Heater
Note(s):
20-40% 0.33-0.56 0.31-0.49 7.6-15.2 30-60 15-30 Mass (HC > 7 Btu/ft^2) 0.9
Cooling Capacity > 54 kBtu 80% Combustion Efficiency 10.8 EER/11.2 IPLV - 11.0 EER/11.5 IPLV 90% Thermal Efficiency
1) Guide provides approximate parameters for constructing a building which is 30% more efficient than ASHRAE 90.1-1999. Ranges are because of climate zone dependencies.
Source(s): ASHRAE, Advanced Energy Design Guide for Small Office Buildings, 2004.
3-97
Buildings Energy Data Book: 3.6 Office Building Markets and Companies
3.6.8 Typical Office Building (1) Large (>= 25,000 SF) 8.22 90 - 137 39,240 40 - 50 1.39 - 1.71 0.69 - 0.8 2.5 - 6.0 9.1 - 12.6 masonry built-up 390 - 460 12 5 1 3,580 1.3 - 1.8 4,190 Constant Volume w/ Reheat VAV w/ Economizer Gas Boiler Hermetic Centrifugal Chiller Gas Boiler Small (<25,000 SF) 4.29 5.5 - 6.6 39,084 15 - 20 1.34 - 1.99 0.71 - 0.82 3.9 - 6.3 10.5 - 13.3 masonry built-up 420 - 470 11 4 1 3,360 1.7 - 2.2 3,340
October 2009
Stock Floor Area (billion SF) Floor-Area Weighted Averages Building Area (thousand SF) Floors Shell Percent Glass Window R-Value Window Shading Coefficient Wall R-Value Roof R-Value Wall Material Roof Material Occupancy Average Occupancy (SF/person) Weekday Hours (hrs/day) Weekend Hours (hrs/day) Equipment Average Power Density (W/SF) Full Lighting Hours (hrs/year) Lighting Average Power Density (W/SF) Full Lighting Hours (hrs/year) System and Plant System and Distribution Type Heating Plant Cooling Plant Service Hot Water
Note(s):
Packaged Single-Zone Packaged Single-Zone w/ Economizer Gas Furnace Direct Expansion Gas Water Heater
1) The prototypes are synthetic buildings compiled from statistical data from building surveys or conclusions from previous studies. The physical characteristics, system characteristics, and usage patterns are based upon various surveys, studies, engineering estimates, or engineering judgment.
Source(s): LBNL, Commercial Heating and Cooling Loads Component Analysis, Nov. 1999, Table 10, p. 31.
3-98
September 2008
Chain Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. The Home Depot The Kroger Co. Target Corp. Costco Sears Holdings Walgreen Co. Lowe's CVS Caremark Corp. Safeway
Source(s): Chain Store Age, 2007 Top 100 U.S. Retailers, August 2007. Full report available at http://www.chainstoreage.com/industrydata/pdf/top100retailers/csa_2007_Top_100_Charts.pdf
3.7.2
2006 Top Chain Restaurants, by Sales 2006 Sales ($billion) 27.1 8.5 7.8 7.7 6.3 5.5 5.3 5.2 4.3 3.3 % Change over 2005 Sales 5.7% 0.4% 1.1% 7.5% 2.8% 21.1% 1.2% -2.3% 11.9% 10.7% Franchised Stores 11,670 6,656 4,638 20,755 4,341 4,371 6,079 5,239 2,565 Company-owned Total Stores Stores 2,104 13,774 878 7,534 1,310 5,948 20,755 1,267 5,608 5,728 5,728 1,023 5,394 1,453 7,532 5,239 623 3,188
Chain McDonalds Burger King (1) Wendys (2) Subway (2) Taco Bell (2) Starbucks (3) KFC (2) Pizza Hut (2) Dunkin Donuts Sonic Drive-In
Note(s):
Source(s):
1) Includes U.S. and Canadian Units. 2) Estimates. 3) U.S. only sales, estimate.
QSR Magazine, The QSR 50 - 2007, Available at http://www.qsrmagazine.com/reports/qsr50/2007/charts/qsr50-1.phtml.
3.7.3
2006 Top Supermarkets, by Sales 2006 All Commodity Volume (millions) 126.6642 59.804888 33.95678 33.68378 24.1696 20.1864 17.25282 11.1787 8.4591 7.3281 No. of Stores (> $2 million in sales) 2401 2459 1718 1526 786 901 1560 276 522 176 Square Feet Selling Area (thousands) 149366 103493 70068 55707 33995 33505 46504 13474 24180 10397
Supermarket Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. Kroger Co. Supervalu, Inc. Safeway, Inc. Ahold USA (Stop and Shop, Giant) Publix Super Markets, Inc. Delhaize America, Inc. (Food Lion) H.E. Butt Grocery Co. (HEB) Winn-Dixie Stores, Inc. Meijer, Inc.
Note(s):
All commodity volume in this example represents the annualized range of the estimated retail sales volume of all items sold at a retail site that pass through the retailers cash registers. TDLinx ACV is an estimate based on best available dataa directional measure to be used as an indicator of store and account size, not an actual retail sales report". (Progressive Grocer)
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September 2008
Shell Percent Glass Window (U-Factor SHGC Wall R-Value Roof R-Value Attic Insulation Above Deck Wall Material Lighting Average Power Density (W/ft.^2) System and Plant System and Distribution Type Packaged Single-Zone Packaged Single-Zone w/ Economizer Heating Plant Gas Furnace(>225 kBtuh) Cooling Plant Air conditioner (>135-240 kBtuh) Service Hot Water Gas Water Heater
Note(s):
40% 0.38-0.69 0.40-0.44 7.6-15.2 c.i. 30-60 15-25 c.i. Mass (HC > 7 Btu/ft^2) 1.3
Cooling Capacity > 54 kBtuh 80% Combustion Efficiency 10.0 EER/10.4 IPLV - 11.0 EER/11.5 IPLV 90% Thermal Efficiency
1) Guide provides approximate parameters for constructing a building which is 30% more efficient than ASHRAE 90.1-1999. Ranges are because of climate zone dependencies.
Source(s): ASHRAE, Advanced Energy Design Guide for Small Retail Buildings, 2004.
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September 2008
Stock Floor Area (billion SF) Floor-Area Weighted Averages Building Area (thousand SF) Floors Shell Percent Glass Window R-Value Window Shading Coefficient Wall R-Value Roof R-Value Wall Material Roof Material Occupancy Average Occupancy (SF/person) Weekday Hours (hrs/day) Weekend Hours (hrs/day) Equipment Average Power Density (W/SF) Full Equipment Hours (hrs/year) Lighting Average Power Density (W/SF) Full Lighting Hours (hrs/year) System and Plant System and Distribution Type Heating Plant Cooling Plant Service Hot Water
Note(s):
Packaged Single-Zone Packaged Single-Zone w/ Economizer Gas Furnace Direct Expansion Gas Water Heater
1) The prototypes are synthetic buildings compiled from statistical data from building surveys or conclusions from previous studies. The physical characteristics, system characteristics, and usage patterns are based upon various surveys, studies, engineering estimates, or engineering judgment.
Source(s): LBNL, Commercial Heating and Cooling Loads Component Analysis, June 1998, Table 11, p. 32.
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September 2008
1) Does not equal sum of the other categories. Can also include purchased steam, purchased chilled water, and fuel oil.
Source(s): BOMA International, The Experience Exchange Report 2007, August 2007.
3.8.2
Inpatient Medical Facilities Square Footage, Delivered Energy, Energy Intensity, Selected Years Total Square Footage (billion) 1.865 1.905 1.999 2.131 2.314 2.508 2.718 2.949 Energy Use (quadrillion Btus) 0.43 0.48 0.41 0.44 0.50 0.55 0.60 0.65 Energy Intensity (thousand Btus/SF) 229.0 249.3 205.1 206.2 215.0 219.1 220.9 219.8
Source(s): EIA, The Commercial Energy Consumption Survey 2003, Table A2. Census Region, Number of Buildings and Floorspace for All Buildings (Including Malls); EIA, The Commercial Energy Consumption Survey 1999, Table B3. Page 11 Census Region, Number of Buildings and Floorspace; EIA, The Supplement to the Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Table 22, June 2008.
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September 2008
Stock Floor Area (billion SF) Floor-Area Weighted Averages Building Area (thousand SF) Floors Shell Percent Glass Window R-Value Window Shading Coefficient Wall R-Value Roof R-Value Wall Material Roof Material Occupancy Average Occupancy (SF/person) Weekday Hours (hrs/day) Weekend Hours (hrs/day) Equipment Average Power Density (W/SF) Full Equipment Hours (hrs/year) Lighting Average Power Density (W/SF) Full Lighting Hours (hrs/year) System and Plant System and Distribution Type
1) The prototypes are synthetic buildings compiled from statistical data from building surveys or conclusions from previous studies. The physical characteristics, system characteristics, and usage patterns are based upon various surveys, studies, engineering estimates, or engineering judgment.
Source(s): LBNL, Commercial Heating and Cooling Loads Component Analysis, June 1998, Table 14, p. 35.
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2003 Delivered Energy End-Use Intensities and Consumption of Educational Facilities, by Building Activity (1) (10^12 Btu) 389 47% 79 10% 83 10% 57 7% 113 14% 8 1% 16 2% 4 0% 32 4% 39 5% 820 100% (thousand Btu/SF) 39.4 8.0 8.4 5.8 11.5 0.8 1.6 0.4 4.0 3.4 83.1
Space Heating Cooling Ventilation Water Heating Lighting Cooking Refrigeration Office Equipment Computers Other Total
Note(s):
1) Educational facilities include K-12 as well as higher education facilities. 2) Due to rounding, sum does not add up to total.
Source(s): EIA, 2003 Commercial Building Energy Consumption and Expenditures End-Uses, Sept. 2008, Table E1A and E2A.
3.9.2
2003-2004 Number of Public K-12 Schools in the United States and Students per School Average Number of Students per School (2003-2004) (3) Elementary 438 Middle 616 High 758 Other 266
Number of Schools (2004-2005) Regular (1) 86,487 Special 1,635 Vocational 326 Alternative 4,847 Total (2) 93,295
Note(s):
1) Regular schools are those responsible for providing free public education for school-age children residing within their jurisdiction. 2) Data is based on total number of schools reporting current student enrollment, which varies from the actual number of schools, 96,296. Special focuses primarily on special education with materials and instructional approaches to meet the needs of the students. A vocational school focuses on technical or career skills and training. An alternative school addresses the needs of students that typically cannot be met in a traditional school setting. 3) Averages are for regular schools.
and School Districts: School Year 2003-04, Feb. 2006, Table 1, p. 3 and Table 8, p. 19.
Source(s): U.S. Department of Education/National Center for Educational Statistics (NCES), Public Elementary and Secondary Students, Staff, Schools,
3.9.3
National Enrollment and Expenditures for Public K-12 Facilities ($2006) Enrollment (millions) 39.42 40.54 44.11 46.86 48.18 48.56 49.27 50.74 Expenditures ($billion) 254.0 301.9 330.2 389.5 433.7 454.0 507.8 597.6
Expenditures per Pupil 6,444 7,446 7,484 8,313 9,000 9,405 10,419 11,779
Source(s): NCES, Projections of Educational Statistics to 2016, Sept. 2006, Table 33, p. 82 for 1990-2014; NCES, Projections of Educational Statistics to 2011, Oct. 2001, Table 33, p. 88 for 1986; and EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for price inflators.
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September 2008
1) Operation and maintenance services include salaries, benefits, supplies, and contractual fees for supervision of operations and maintenance, operating buildings (heating, lighting, ventilating, repair and replacement), care and upkeep of grounds and equipment, vehicle operation and maintenance (other than student transportation), security and other operations and maintenance services.
for price inflators.
Source(s): NCES, Digest of Educational Statistics 2007, Mar. 2008, Table 169, p. 250-251; EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377
3.9.5
New Construction and Renovations Expenditures for Public K-12 Schools ($2006 Billion) New Schools 6.11 7.46 9.53 7.11 13.42 12.74 13.04 19.10 14.08 12.67 13.70 Additions 4.13 4.36 6.21 6.04 4.75 4.81 6.35 5.79 5.93 6.34 3.29 Modernizations 3.36 3.31 4.90 5.95 6.96 12.92 7.83 6.47 10.94 4.66 8.34 Total 13.60 15.13 20.64 19.09 25.13 30.47 27.22 31.36 30.95 23.67 25.33
1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
Source(s): American School and University, 23rd Annual Official Education Report, May 1997 for 1996; American School and University, 24th Annual Official Education Report, May 1998 for 1997; American School and University, 25th Annual Official Education Report, May 1999 for 1998; American School and University, 26th Annual Official Education Report, May 2000 for 1999; American School and University, 27th Annual Official Education Report, May 2001, Table 1, p. 26 for 2000; American School and University, 28th Annual Official Education Report, May 2002, Table 1, p. 24 for 2001; American School and University, 29th Annual Official Education Report, May 2003, Table 1, p. 29 for 2002; American School and University, 30th Annual Official Education Report, May 2004, Table 1, p. 24 for 2003; American School and University, 31st Annual Official Education Report, May 2005, Table 1, p. 29 for 2004; American School and University, 32nd Annual Official Education Report, May 2006, Table 1, p. 24 for 2005; American School and University, 33rd Annual Official Education Report, May 2007, Table 1, p. 30 for 2006; and EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377.
3.9.6
Percentage of Public K-12 Schools with Inadequate Building Features (1) Small 1995 1999 26% 24% 18% 19% 26% 31% 23% 20% 33% 28% 36% 29% 28% 23% 25% 19% Medium 1995 1999 25% 22% 18% 12% 26% 21% 23% 16% 28% 27% 35% 32% 25% 21% 24% 17% Large 1995 1999 32% 22% 17% 14% 28% 23% 27% 18% 30% 20% 39% 26% 27% 22% 26% 16%
Roofs Framing, Floors, and Foundations Exterior Walls, Finishes, Windows, and Doors Interior Finishes Plumbing HVAC Electrical Power Electrical Lighting
Note(s):
1) Small school is defined as having 1-299 students, medium 300-599 students, and a large school has 600 or more students.
Education, and Human Services Division, America's Schools Report Differing Conditions, GAO/HEHS-96-103, June 1996, Table II.9, p. 45 for 1995.
Source(s): National Center for Education Statistics, Digest of Educational Statistics 2005, July 2006, Table 100, p. 176-177 for 1999; and U.S. GAO, Health,
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September 2008
Shell Percent Glass Window U-Factor Wall R-Value Roof R-Value Attic Insulation Above Deck Wall Material Lighting Average Power Density(Watts/ft.^2) With Daylighting Without Daylighting System and Plant System and Plant 1 Central System Packaged Multi-Zone w/ Economizer Heating Plant: Cooling Plant: Service Hot Water:
Note(s):
35% Maximum 0.33-0.56 5.7-15.2 30.0-60.0 (2) 25.0 Mass: Heat Capacity > 7 Btu/SF*F
0.9 1.1
Comply with ASHRAE 90.1 80-85 Combustion Efficiency Comply with ASHRAE 90.1 80-85 Combustion Efficiency
1) Guide provides approximate parameters for constructing a building which is 30% more efficient than ASHRAE 90.1-1999. Ranges are because of climate zone dependencies.
Source(s): ASHRAE, Advanced Energy Design Guide for K-12 School Buildings, 2004.
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September 2008
Stock Floor Area (billion SF) Floor-Area Weighted Averages Building Area (thousand SF) Floors Shell Percent Glass Window R-Value Window Shading Coefficient Wall R-Value Roof R-Value Wall Material Roof Material Occupancy Average Occupancy (SF/person) Weekday Hours (hrs/day) Weekend Hours (hrs/day) Equipment Average Power Density (W/SF) Full Equipment Hours (hrs/year) Lighting Average Power Density (W/SF) Full Lighting Hours (hrs/year) System and Plant System and Distribution Type
1 Central System Packaged Multi-Zone w/ Economizer Gas Boiler Hermetic Centrifugal Chiller Gas Boiler
1) The prototypes are synthetic buildings compiled from statistical data from building surveys or conclusions from previous studies. The physical characteristics, system characteristics, and usage patterns are based upon various surveys, studies, engineering estimates, or engineering judgment.
Source(s): LBNL, Commercial Heating and Cooling Loads Component Analysis, June 1998, Table 15, p. 36; and D&R for hours of occupancy.
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Average Electricity Consumption (thousand Btus/SF): Average Natural Gas Consumption (thousand Btus/SF): Average Fuel Oil Consumption (thousand Btus/SF) (2): Total Energy Consumption (quads) Average Energy Consumption (thousand Btu/SF): Total Floorspace (billion SF):
Note(s):
1) Averages for fuel souces include only the floorspace that use a given fuel. 2) For Hotels, fuel oil was often used in buildings that used natural gas as well.
Source(s): EIA, Commercial Buildings Energy Consumption Survey 2003 Public Use Data Files, December 2006, Tables 2, 15, and 16.
3.10.2
Lodging Industry, Rooms, Sales and Occupancy Rates Guestrooms (thousand) 4,200 4,398 4,416 4,412 4,402 4,389
Source(s): The American Lodging Association, 2002 Lodging Industy Profile, p. 2-3; The American Lodging Association, 2003 Lodging Industy Profile, p. 2-3, 2002; The American Lodging Association, 2004 Lodging Industy Profile, p. 2-4, 2004; The American Lodging Association, 2005 Lodging Industy Profile, p. 2, 4, 2005; The American Lodging Association, 2006 Lodging Industy Profile, p. 2, 4, 2006; The American Lodging Association, 2007 Lodging Industy Profile, p. 2, 4, 2007.
3.10.3
Hotel/Motel Rooms and Properties by Location, Room Size (Thousands) 2001 Rooms Properties 13.7 1,232 17.5 1,328 4.5 667 3.4 469 2.4 490 2004 (1) Rooms Properties 15.8 1,564 6.7 446 4.6 706 1.9 274 4.1 595 14.5 826 2005 Rooms Properties 15.9 1,570 6.8 452 4.6 700 1.9 275 3.8 573 14.6 832 2006 Rooms Properties 15.9 1,577 6.8 452 4.5 691 2.0 275 3.6 567 14.4 827
1) Small Metro/Town category was created this year. With this recategorization, rooms were redistributed from other categories.
p. 2, 4, 2005; The American Lodging Association, 2006 Lodging Industy Profile, p. 2, 4, 2006; The American Lodging Association, 2007 Lodging Industy Profile, p. 2, 4, 2007.
Source(s): The American Lodging Association, 2002 Lodging Industy Profile, p. 2-3, 2002; The American Lodging Association, 2005 Lodging Industy Profile,
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Source(s): DOE/FEMP, Annual Report to Congress on FEMP, Sept. 2006, Table A-1, p. 148 for total consumption and Table A-3, p. 150 for buildings consumption.
4.1.2
FY 2005 Federal Building Energy Use Shares, by Fuel Type and Agency Site Percent 46.1% 33.2% 9.4% 4.3% 6.9% 100% Primary Percent 74.7% 15.6% 4.4% 2.0% 3.3% 100% | | | | | | | | Primary Percent 62.9% 10.0% 5.3% 8.5% 4.8% 8.5% 100% | | | | | | | | FY 2005 (10^15 Btu) Total Delivered Energy Consumption = Total Primary Energy Consumption = 0.30 0.65
Fuel Type Electricity Natural Gas Fuel Oil Coal Other Total
Note(s):
Source(s): DOE/FEMP, Annual Report to Congress on FEMP, Sept. 2006, Table A-5, p. 152 for fuel types and Table A-3, p. 150 for agency consumption.
4.1.3
Federal Building Delivered Energy Consumption Intensities, by Year (1) Consumption per Gross Year Square Foot (10^3 Btu/SF) FY 1996 115.0 FY 1997 111.9 FY 1998 107.7 FY 1999 106.7 FY 2000 104.8 FY 2001 105.9 FY 2002 104.6 FY 2003 105.2 FY 2004 104.9 FY 2005 (3) 98.2 FY 2010 (4) 80.0
Consumption per Gross Year Square Foot (10^3 Btu/SF) FY 1985 123.0 FY 1986 131.3 FY 1987 136.9 FY 1988 136.3 FY 1989 132.6 FY 1990 128.6 FY 1991 122.9 FY 1992 125.5 FY 1993 122.3 FY 1994 120.2 FY 1995 (2) 117.3
Note(s):
1) See Table 2.3.1 for floorspace. 2) Exceeds the National Energy Conservation Policy Act goal of 125,700 Btu/SF. 3) Misses the goal of Executive Order 13123 for FY 2005 of 97,600 Btu/SF. 4) Executive Order 13123 goal.
floorspace; DOE/FEMP, Annual Report to Congress on FEMP, Aug. 2005, Table 6-A, p. A-10 for 2003; DOE/FEMP, Annual Report to Congress on FEMP, Feb. 2006, Table 6-A, p. A-10 for 2004; DOE/FEMP, Annual Report to Congress on FEMP, Sept. 2006, Table 2, p. 13 for 1985 and 2005; and DOE/FEMP for remaining data.
Source(s): DOE/FEMP, Annual Report to Congress on FEMP, Sept. 2004, Table 5-B, p. 57 for 1990-2002 energy consumption and Table 8-A, p. 65 for 2002
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October 2009
1) In July 2000, in accordance with Section 503 of Executive Order 13123, the Secretary of Energy approved a goal that the equivalent of 2.5 percent of electricity consumption from Federal facilities should come from new renewable energy sources by 2005. 2) EPAs renewable energy use is 112.6% of its electricity use due to its purchases and generation of non-electric renewable energy.
Source(s): DOE/FEMP, Annual Report to Congress on FEMP, Sept. 2006, Table 5, p. 21, and p. 20 for note 1.
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Buildings Energy Data Book: 4.2 Federal Buildings and Facilities Characteristics
4.2.1 Federal Building Gross Floorspace, by Year and Agency 2005 Percent of Total Floorspace 66% 12% 6% 5% 2% 8% 100%
October 2009
Fiscal Year FY 1985 FY 1986 FY 1987 FY 1988 FY 1989 FY 1990 FY 1991 FY 1992 FY 1993 FY 1994 FY 1995 FY 1996 FY 1997 FY 1998 FY 1999 FY 2000 FY 2001 FY 2002 FY 2003 FY 2004 FY 2005
Note(s):
Floorspace (10^9 SF) 3.37 3.38 3.40 3.23 3.30 3.40 3.21 3.20 3.20 3.11 3.04 3.03 3.02 3.07 3.07 3.06 3.07 3.03 3.04 2.97 2.96
The Federal Government owns/operates over 500,000 buildings, including 422,000 housing structures (for the military) and 51,000 nonresidential buildings.
Report to Congress on FEMP, Dec. 11, 2002, Table 8-A, p. 83 for FY 1985 and FY 2000; DOE/FEMP, Annual Report to Congress on FEMP, Feb. 4, 2004, Table 8-A, p. 66 for 2001; DOE/FEMP, Annual Report to Congress on FEMP, Sept. 29, 2004, Table 8-A, p. 65 for 2002; DOE/FEMP, Annual Report to Congress on FEMP, Aug. 9, 2005, Table 6-A, p. 65 for 2003; DOE/FEMP, Annual Report to Congress on FEMP, Feb. 24, 2006, Table 6-A, p. A-10 for 2004; and DOE/FEMP, Annual Report to Congress on FEMP, Sept. 26, 2006, Table 2, p. 13 for 2005 .
Source(s): DOE/FEMP for FY 1986-1998; DOE/FEMP, Annual Report to Congress on FEMP, May 10, 2001, Table 7-A, p. 56 for FY 1999; DOE/FEMP, Annual
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Buildings Energy Data Book: 4.3 Federal Buildings and Facilities Expenditures
4.3.1 FY 2005 Federal Buildings Energy Prices' and Expenditures, by Fuel Type ($2006) Average Fuel Prices ($/million Btu) 21.51 (1) 8.53 9.63 3.10 10.85 12.43 14.63 14.19
October 2009
Fuel Type Electricity Natural Gas Fuel Oil Coal Purchased Steam LPG/Propane Other Average
Note(s):
Total Expenditures ($million) (2) 2,977.3 849.2 272.1 40.1 134.1 37.9 79.5 Total 4,390.1
1) $0.071/kWh. 2) Energy used in buildings in FY 2005 accounted for 29.5% of the total Federal energy bill.
EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, p. 377 for price deflators.
Source(s): DOE, Annual Report to Congress on FEMP, Sept. 2006, Table 5, p. 152 for prices and expenditures, and p. E-2 for Federal buildings energy expenditures.
Annual Energy Expenditures per Gross Square Foot of Federal Floorspace Stock, by Year ($2006) 2.24 1.25 1.36 1.35 1.43 1.48
Total Federal buildings and facilities energy expenditures in FY 2005 were $4.26 billion (in $2005).
Annual Report to Congress on FEMP, Feb. 2006, Table 5, p. A-9 for energy costs and Table 6-A, p. A-10 for floorspace; DOE/FEMP, Annual Report to Congress on FEMP, Aug. 2005, Table 5, p. A-9 for energy costs and Table 6-A, p. A-10 for floorspace; DOE/FEMP, Annual Report to Congress on FEMP, Sept. 2004, Table C, p. C-2 for energy costs and Table 8-A, p. 65 for floorspace; and DOE/FEMP, Annual Report to Congress on FEMP, Dec. 2002, Table 8-A, p. 61 for floorspace.
Source(s): DOE/FEMP, Annual Report to Congress on FEMP, Sept. 2006, Table 7-B, p. 62 for energy costs, and Table 2, p. 13 for floorspace; DOE/FEMP,
Direct Appropriations on Federal Buildings Energy Conservation Retrofits and Capital Equipment ($2006 Million) 432.37 317.66 91.51 100.78 77.26 84.57 | | | | | | FY 1991 FY 1992 FY 1993 FY 1994 FY 1995 FY 1996 156.73 194.66 158.37 295.49 362.20 220.85 | | | | | | FY 1997 FY 1998 FY 1999 FY 2000 FY 2001 FY 2002 242.26 315.27 242.69 139.60 147.87 134.84 | | | FY 2003 FY 2004 FY 2005 187.99 185.21 299.0811503
Source(s): DOE/FEMP, Annual Report to Congress on FEMP, Sept. 2006, Table 10-B, p. 32; DOE/FEMP, Annual Report to Congress on FEMP, Dec. 2002, Table 4-A, p. 32; and EIA, Annual Energy Review 2006, June 2007, Appendix D, p. 377 for price deflators.
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October 2009
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October 2009
Insulation Type Fiberglass Foamed Plastic Cellulose Mineral Wool Other Total
Note(s): 1) Projected.
5.1.2
Industry Use Shares of Mineral Fiber (Glass/Wool) Insulation (1) 1997 70% 27% 3% 100% 1999 71% 26% 3% 100% 2001 72% 25% 3% 100% 2003 65% 28% 7% 100% 2004 64% 30% 6% 100% 2005 63% 31% 5% 100%
Insulating Buildings (2) Industrial, Equipment, and Appliance Insulation Unknown Total
Note(s):
Source(s): DOC, Annual Survey of Manufacturers: Value of Product Shipments 2005, Nov. 2006, Table 1, p. 54 for 2003-2005; and DOC,
5.1.3
Thermal Performance of Insulation R-Value per Inch (1) R-Value per Inch (1) (3) Perlite/Vermiculite Loose-Fill Foam Boards Expanded Polystyrene Polyisocyanurate/ Polyurethane Phenolic Reflective Insulation Vacuum Powder Insulation Vacuum Insulation Panel 2.1 - 3.7 3.9 - 4.4 5.6 - 7.0 4.4 - 8.2 2 - 17 25 - 30 20 - 100
Fiberglass (2) Batts Loose-Fill Spray-Applied Rock Wool (2) Loose-Fill Cellulose Loose-Fill Spray-Applied
3.1 - 4.3 2.5 - 3.7 3.7 - 3.9 2.5 - 3.7 3.1 - 3.7 2.9 - 3.5
Note(s):
1) Hr-SF-F/Btu-in. Does not include the effects of aging and settling. 2) Mineral fiber. 3) System R-Value depends on heat-flow direction and number of air spaces.
p. 81-95; ORNL, ORNL/SUB/88-SA835/1, 1990; ORNL, Science and Technology for a Sustainable Energy Future, Mar. 1995, p. 17; and ORNL for vacuum insulation panel.
Source(s): ASHRAE, 1997 ASHRAE Handbook: Fundamentals, p. 24-4, 22-5; DOE, Insulation Fact Sheet, Jan. 1988, p. 6; Journal of Thermal Insulation, 1987,
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October 2009
1) Extensive: soil depth of less than 6 inches. 2)Intensive: soil depth greater than 6 inches. 3) Mixed: at least 25% break up between extensive and intensive. 4)This data is best used as a gauge of activity in this market rather than actual amount of green roofs. Source(s): Green Roof Industry Survey, Green Roof Infrastructure Monitor, (date)
5.1.5
Properties of Cool Roofing Materials (1) Solar Reflectance (2) 0.26 0.25 0.22 0.19 0.12 0.05 Infrared Emittance (3) 0.91 0.91 0.91 0.91 0.91 0.91
Asphalt Shingles Shasta White Generic White Generic Grey Light Brown Medium Brown Generic Black White Coatings White Coating (1 coat, 8 mil) White Coating (2 coats, 20 mil) Aluminum Coatings Aluminum Fibered on Black Membranes Gray EPDM (4) White EPDM (4) T-EPDM (4) Light Gravel on Built-Up Roof Metal Roof New, Bare Galvanized Steel Tiles Red Clay White Concrete Fiber Cement, Pewter Gray
0.80 0.85
0.91 0.91
0.61 0.40
0.25 0.56
0.61
0.04
1) A good cool-roofing material has high solar reflectance and high infrared emittance. 2) Solar Relectance is the percentage of incident solar radiation that is reflected by the material. 3) A number between 0 and 1 that describes the ability of a material to shed heat. The lower the value, the more heat the material retains. 4) Ethylene propylene diene monomer rubber material. Source(s): Lawernce Berkley National Laboratory, Cool Roofing Materials Database, http://eetd.lbl.gov/coolroofs/.
Note(s):
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October 2009
Commercial Roofing Residential Roofing 0.0 0.1 0.0 0.1 0.0 0.1 4.4 0.0 1.0 0.1 1.2 0.3 3.5 0.2 4.1 0.5
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October 2009
1) Average window life span is 35-45 years. 2) In 1993, 65% of aluminum-framed windows were thermally broken. 3) Includes vinyl-clad and metal-clad units. 4) Due to rounding, sums may not add up to totals.
and Forecast 1996, 1997, Table 6, p. 6 for 1990; AAMA/WDMA, 2000 AAMA/WDMA Industry Statistical Review and Forecast, Feb. 2001, p. 6 for 1995; 2003 AAMA/WDMA Industry Statistical Review and Forecast, June 2004, p. 6 for 2000 and 2003; and LBNL, Savings from Energy Efficient Windows, Apr. 1993, p. 6 for window life span; AAMA/WDMA, Study of U.S. Market For Windows, Doors, and Skylights, Apr. 2006, p. 41 for 2005.; AAMA/WDMA. U.S. Industry Statistical Review and Forecast Mar. 2008, p. 6 for 2007.
Source(s): AAMA, Industry Statistical Review and Forecast 1992, 1993 for Note 2; AAMA/NWWDA, Industry Statistical Review
5.2.2
Residential Storm Window and Door Shipments, by Type (Million Units) Windows 2000 2005 8.0 6.6 2.3 2.0 0.3 0.2 10.6 8.8 Doors 2000 2005 4.3 4.4 1.4 1.7 0.1 0.1 5.8 6.4 Total 2000 2005 12.3 11.0 3.7 3.7 0.4 0.3 16.4 15.2
2007 NA NA NA NA
2007 NA NA NA NA
1) Other includes metal over wood/foam core or vinyl, etc. 2) Due to rounding, sums may not add up to totals.
AAMA/WDMA Industry Statistical Review and Forecast, Feb. 2001, p. 7 for 1995; and 2003 AAMA/WDMA Industry Statistical Review and Forecast, June 2004, p. 6 for 2000 and 2003; AAMA/WDMA, Study of U.S. Market for Windows, Doors, and Skylights, Apr. 2006, p. 101, Exhibit G.2 for 2005; AAMA/WDMA, Study of U.S. Market for Windows, Doors, and Skylights, Mar. 2008, p. 98
Source(s): AAMA/NWWDA, Industry Statistical Review and Forecast 1996, 1997, Table 7, p. 7 for 1990; AAMA/NWWDA, 2000
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October 2009
Type New Construction Commercial Windows (2) Curtain Wall Store Front Total (3) Remodeling/Replacement Commercial Windows (2) Curtain Wall Store Front Total (3) Total Commercial Windows (2) Curtain Wall Store Front Total (3)
Note(s):
18 4 12 34
29 3 9 40
25 6 18 49
27 3 9 38
46 8 24 78
34 5 20 60
27 10 22 59
19 4 13 36
116 28 76 220
109 15 51 174
22 7 19 48
62 20 29 111
41 12 29 82
59 18 30 106
67 24 38 129
90 36 66 193
40 18 33 91
56 27 42 126
1) Usage is a good indication of sales. 2) Formerly referred to as Architectural. Includes both shop-fabricated (true architectural) and site -fabricated products. 3) Due to rounding, sums may not add up to totals.
Statistical Review and Forecast, Mar. 2008, p. 17 for 2007.
Source(s): AAMA/Ducker Research, Industry Statistical Review and Forecast 1996, Mar. 1997, p. 17 for 1995; and AAMA/WDMA/Ducker, U.S. Industry
5.2.4
Insulating Glass Historical Penetration, by Sector (Percent of Total U.S. Usage) (1) 1985 73% 63% 1990 86% 80% 1995 89% 84% 2000 92% 86% 2005 94% 88% 2007 95% 89%
1) Usage is a good indication of sales. Includes double- and triple-pane sealed units.
1993, for 1990; AAMA/WDMA, 2000 AAMA/WDMA Industry Statistical Review and Forecast, Feb. 2001, p. 12 for 1995-1997; and 2003 AAMA/WDMA Industry Statistical Review and Forecast, June 2004, p.12 for 1998-2000; AAMA/WDMA, Study of U.S. Market For Windows, Doors, and Skylights, Apr. 2006, for 2005; AAMA/WDMA, U.S. Industry Statistical Review and Forecast, Mar. 2008, p. 12
Source(s): Ducker Research, Industry Statistical Review and Forecast 1992, 1993 for 1985; AAMA/Ducker Research, Industry Statistical Review and Forecast
5.2.5
Residential Prime Window Sales, by Type (Million Units) 1980 8.6 0.0 16.6 25.2 1990 4.9 12.0 18.7 35.6 1995 5.5 37.8 1.3 44.5 2001 3.9 50.9 1.5 56.3 2003 4.7 55.9 2.2 62.8 2005 4.2 63.8 2.5 70.5 2007 2.7 55.0 1.4 59.1
1) IG = insulated glazing.
for Windows and Doors, Apr. 2000, Exhibit E.7, p. 55; AAMA/WDMA, Study of the Market for U.S. Doors, Windows and Skylights, Apr. 2004, Exhibit D.4, p. 46; and, AAMA/WDMA, Study of U.S. Market For Windows, Doors, and Skylights, Apr. 2006, Exhibit D.8 Conventional Window Glass Usage, p. 50.; AAMA/WDMA, Study of U.S. Market For Windows, Doors, and Skylights, Mar. 2008, Exhibit D.8 Conventional Window Glass Usage, p. 49
Source(s): AAMA/NWWDA, Study of the U.S. Market for Windows and Doors, 1996, Table 22, p.49; AAMA/WDMA, Study of U.S. and Canadian Market
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October 2009
Census Division New England Middle Atlantic East North Central West North Central South Atlantic East South Central West South Central Mountain Pacific National Selected States New York Florida Texas California
Total 3.2 10.3 11.7 4.8 9.0 3.4 4.1 4.5 7.5 58.5
Total Housholds(2) 5.3 15.0 17.3 7.7 21.3 6.8 12.1 7.3 16.4 109.2
Note(s):
1) Preliminary data. 2) This is the total households using single- and double-pane glass. An additional 1.3 million households use o ther forms of windows, such as triple-pane windows.
Source(s): EIA, The 2005 Residential Energy Consumption Survey, Tables HC 11.5, HC 12.5, HC 13.5, HC 14.5, and HC 15.5, June 2008.
5.2.7
Nonresidential Window Stock and Usage, by Type (1) Existing U.S. Stock (% of buildings) 0.526 47% 1 0.649 0.285 0.066 (3) 1 Glass Area Usage (million SF) 2001 2003 2005 57 48 56 415 373 407 472 421 463 49% 24% 8% 19% 1 43% 17% 6% 34% 1 44% 15% 4% 37% 1
Type Single-Pane Insulating Glass (2) Total Clear Tinted Reflective Low-e Total
Note(s):
1) Usage is a good indication of sales. 2) Includes double- and triple-pane sealed units (and stock glazing with storm windows). 3) Included as part of the Tinted category.
AAMA/NWWDA, 1996 Study of the U.S. Market for Windows and Doors, Table 27, p. 60 for 1995 usage values; 2003 AAMA/WDMA Study of the U.S. Market for Windows, Doors and Skylights, Exhibits D.31 and D.32 for 2001; AAMA/WDMA/Ducker, Study of U.S. Market For Windows, Doors, and Skylights, Apr. 2006, Exhibit D.31 and Exhibit D.32, p. 73 for 2003 and 2005.; AAMA/WDMA/Ducker, Study of U.S. Market For Windows, Doors, and Skylights, Mar. 2008, Exhibit D.31 and Exhibit D.32, p. 72 for 2007.
Source(s): EIA, 2003 Commercial Buildings Energy Consumption and Expenditures: Consumption and Expenditures Tables, June 2006, Table B1 for stock data;
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October 2009
Sinlge-Glazed Clear Single-Glazed with Bronze Tint Double-Glazed Clear Double-Glazed with grey/Bronze Tint Double-Glazed with High Performance Tint Double-Glazed with High-Solar Gain Low-e Glass, Argon/Krypton Gas Double-Glazed with Moderate-Solar Gain Low-e Glass, Argon/Krypton Gas Double-Glazed with Low-Solar Gain Low-e (1) Glass, Argon/Krypton Gas Triple-Glazed (2) with High-Solar Gain Low-e Glass, Argon/Krypton Gas (3) Triple-Glazed (2) with Low-Solar Gain Low-e (1) Glass, Argon/Krypton Gas (3)
Note(s):
U-Factor 0.84-1.16 0.84-1.16 0.44-0.76 0.44-0.76 0.44-0.76 0.29-0.61 0.27-0.60 0.26-0.59 0.15 0.14
Solar Heat Gain Coeffcient 0.64-0.76 0.54-0.65 0.56-0.68 0.47-0.56 0.39-0.47 0.53-0.64 0.44-0.53 0.30-0.37 0.51 0.33
Visual Transmittence 0.65-0.75 0.49-0.56 0.59-0.68 0.44-0.51 0.50-0.57 0.54-0.62 0.556-0.65 0.51-0.59 0.65 0.56
1) Spectrally selective, 2) Includes double glazing with suspended film, 3) Center of glass properties, does not include frame or installation properties
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Buildings Energy Data Book: 5.3 Heating, Cooling, and Ventilation Equipment
5.3.1 U.S. Heating and Air-Conditioning System Manufacturer Shipments, by Type (Including Exports)
September 2008
Equipment Type Air-Conditioners (1) Heat Pumps Air-to-Air Heat Pumps Water-Source Heat Pumps (2) Chillers Reciprocating Centrifugal/Screw Absorption Furnaces Gas-Fired (3) Electric Oil-Fired (4) Boilers (5)
Note(s):
1990 (1,000s) 2,920.0 808.7 808.7 N.A. N.A. N.A. 5.0 N.A. 2,368.9 1,950.5 280.0 138.5 316.1
2000 (1,000s) 5,346.0 1,539.2 1,339.4 199.8 38.1 24.8 8.5 4.8 3,680.7 3,104.2 455.0 121.5 368.4
2005 (1,000s) 6,472.3 2,336.0 2,113.9 222.0 37.3 24.1 5.8 7.4 3,623.7 3,512.5 N.A. 111.2 369.7
2005 Value of Shipments ($million) (6) 5,836.6 2,226.4 1,869.5 356.9 #### 462.1 566.3 64.2 2,143.7 2,081.0 N.A. 62.8 N.A.
1) Includes exports and gas air conditioners (gas units <10,000 units/yr) and rooftop equipment. Excludes heat pumps, packaged terminal air conditioner units, and room air conditioners. Approximately 95% of unitary air conditioners shipped are 5.5 tons or less (65,000 Btu/hr). ~70% residential and ~30% commercial applications. 2) Includes ground-source heat pumps, which numbered around 80,600 units shipped in 2005. 3) Gas-fired furnace value of shipments are based on Census unit shipment data, which is about 873,500 units higher than the industry data shown. 4) Oil-fired furnace value of shipments are based on Census unit shipment data, which is approximately 33,600 units lower than the industry data shown. 5) 61% of shipments were gas-fired and 39% were oil-fired. 96% of shipments are cast iron and 4% are steel. 6) Total 2005 value of shipments for heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) and refrigeration was $24.7 billion, including industrial and excluding boilers and electric furnaces.
centrifugal/screw chiller shipments; ARI, ARI Koldfax, Feb. 2005, p. 1 for 2004 air conditioner shipments; GAMA, GAMA Statistical Highlights: Ten Year Summary, 1987-1996; GAMA, GAMA Statistical Highlights: Ten Year Summary, 1994-2000 for furnace and boiler shipments; GAMA, GAMA News Release, Jan. 2005 for 2004 boiler shipments; GAMA, Statistical Highlights, Mar. 2005, p. 4 for 2004 furnace shipments; Appliance Manufacturer, Feb. 1998 for electric furnace; DOC, Current Industrial Reports: Refrigeration, Air Conditioning and Warm Air Heating Equipment, MA333M(06)-1, July 2007, Table 2, for water-source heat pumps, chillers, and value of shipments; Appliance Magazine Appliance Statistical Review, 54th Annual Report, May 2007, p. S1 - S4 for 2005 boiler data; ARI Statistical News Releases 2005, http://ari.org/newsroom/stats/2005/; and GAMA News Release, Jan. 2007 for note 5.
Source(s): ARI, Statistical Profile, Oct. 7, 2004, Table 17, p. 24, Table 18, p. 25, and Table 22, p. 30 for air conditioner, air-to-air heat pump, and 1990
5.3.2
Residential Furnace Efficiencies (Percent of Units Shipped) (1) Gas-Fired AFUE Range 75% to 88% 88% or More Total Oil-Fired AFUE Range Below 75% 75% to 80% More Than 80% Total
AFUE Range 1985 Below 65% 15% 65% to 71% 44% 71% to 80% 10% 80% to 86% 19% More Than 86% 12% Total 100%
Average shipped in 1985 (2): Average shipped in 1995: Best Available in 1981: Best Available in 2007:
Note(s):
Average shipped in 1985 (2): Average shipped in 1995: Best Available in 1981: Best Available in 2007:
1) Federal appliance standards effective Jan. 1, 1992, require a minimum of 78% AFUE for furnaces. 3) Includes boilers.
Consumer's Directory of Certified Efficiency Ratings, May 2004, p. 12 and 72-73 for 2004 best-available AFUEs; GAMA Consumer's Directory of Certified Efficiency Ratings for Heating and Water Heating Equipment, May 2007; GAMA Tax Credit Eligible Equipment: Gas- and Oil-Fired Furnaces 95% AFUE or Greater, May 2007; and GAMA AFUE press release 2006: U.S. shipments of gas warm-air central furnaces
Source(s): GAMA's Internet Home Page for 2006 AFUE ranges; GAMA News, Feb. 24, 1987, for 1985 AFUE ranges; LBNL for average shipped AFUE; GAMA,
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5.3.3 Residential Boiler Efficiencies (1) Oil-Fired Boilers Average shipped in 1985 (2): Best Available in 1981: Best Available in 2007:
September 2008
Gas-Fired Boilers Average shipped in 1985 (2): Best Available in 1981: Best Available in 2007:
Note(s):
1) Federal appliance standards effective Jan. 1, 1992, require a minimum of 80% AFUE (except gas-fired steam boiler, which must have a 75% AFUE or higher). 2) Includes furnaces.
for best-available AFUE; and GAMA for 1985 average AFUEs; GAMA Tax Credit Eligible Equipment: Gas- and Oil-Fired Boilers 95% AFUE or Greater, May 2007; and GAMA Consumer's Directory of Certified Efficiency Ratings for Heating and Water Heating Equipment, May 2007.
Source(s): GAMA, Consumer's Directory of Certified Efficiency Ratings for Residential Heating and Water Heating Equipment, Aug. 2005, p. 88 and 106
5.3.4
Residential Air Conditioner and Heat Pump Cooling Efficiencies 2005 Stock Efficiency 10.2 2007 U.S. Average New Efficiency 13 2007 Best-Available New Efficiency 21
Equipment Type Air Conditioners Heat Pump - Cooling Air-Source Ground-Source Heat Pump - Heating Air-Source Ground-Source
SEER EER
10 13.8
13 16
17 30
HSPF COP
6.8 3.4
7.7 3.4
10.6 5
Source(s): EIA/Navigant Consulting, EIA - Technology Forecast Updates - Residential and Commercial Buildings Technologies Reference Case, Second Edition (Revised), Sept. 2007, p. 26-31.
5.3.5
Commercial Equipment Efficiencies 2003 Stock Efficiency 2.3 2.6 2.3 4.7 1.0 1.0 9.2 9.3 3.1 76 79 98 76 77 97 76 2007 U.S. Average New Efficiency 2.7 3.0 2.7 5.9 1.0 1.7 10.1 10.3 3.2 80 83 98 80 80 98 84 2007 Best-Available New Efficiency 2.9 N.A. 3.5 7.3 N.A. N.A. 12 11.7 3.4 96 89 98 82 94 98 89
Equipment Type Chiller Screw Scroll Reciprocating Centrifugal Gas-Fired Absorption Gas-Fired Engine Driven Rooftop A/C Rooftop Heat Pump Boilers Gas-Fired Oil-Fired Electric Gas-Fired Furnace Water Heater Gas-Fired Electric Resistance Gas-Fired Instantaneous
Efficiency Parameter COP COP COP COP COP COP EER EER (cooling) COP (heating) Thermal Efficiency Thermal Efficiency Thermal Efficiency AFUE Thermal Efficiency Thermal Efficiency Thermal Efficiency
Source(s): EIA/Navigant Consulting, EIA - Technology Forecast Updates - Residential and Commercial Buildings Technologies Reference Case, Second Edition (Revised), Sept. 2007, p. 43-80.
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5.3.6
2007 Air-Conditioner/Heat Pump Manufacturer Market Shares (Percent of Products Produced) Total Units Shipped: 16,619,296 (1)
Company Market Share (%) LG Electronics 17% UTC/Carrier 13% Whirlpool 9% Goodman (Amana) 7% American Standard (Trane) 6% Fedders 6% Electrolux (Frigidaire) 6% Lennox 6% Rheem 6% York 4% Nordyne 4% Haier 4% Others 12% Total (2) 100%
Note(s): 1) Does not include water-source or ground-source heat pumps.
Source(s): Appliance Magazine, A Portrait of the U.S. Appliance Industry, Sept. 2008, p. 38.
5.3.7
2007 Gas Furnace Manufacturer Market Shares (Percent of Products Produced) Total Units2,782,006 Shipped:
Company Market Share (%) UTC/Carrier 30% Goodman (Amana) 15% Lennox 14% American Standard (Trane) 13% Rheem 12% York 9% Nordyne 6% Others 1% Total 100%
Source(s): Appliance Magazine, A Portrait of the U.S. Appliance Industry, Sept. 2008, p. 38.
5.3.8
Major Residential HVAC Equipment Lifetimes, Ages, and Replacement Picture Average Lifetime 11 12 15 15 17 N.A. 1990 Average Stock Age 9 8 11 12 N.A. 14 Units to be Replaced During 2009 (1,000s) 4,980 1,131 3,008 N.A. 2,866 141 N.A.
Typical Service Equipment Type Lifetime Range Central Air Conditioners 8 - 14 Heat Pumps 9 - 15 Furnaces Electric 10 - 20 Gas-Fired 12 - 17 Oil-Fired 15 - 19 Steam or Hot-Water Boilers (gas and oil) 20 - 40
Note(s):
Replacement values include smaller commercial building units. Gas/oil furnaces include wall furnaces.
1999 ASHRAE Handbook: HVAC Applications, Table 3, p. 35.3 for boilers service lifetimes; and EIA, Housing Characteristics 1990, May 1992, Table 7, p. 24 for 1990 average stock ages.
Source(s): Appliance Magazine, A Portrait of the U.S. Appliance Industry, Sept. 2008, p. 44 for service and average lifetimes, and units to be replaced; ASHRAE,
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5.3.9 Major Commercial HVAC Equipment Lifetimes and Ages
September 2008
Median Equipment Type Lifetime Air Conditioners Through-the-Wall 15 Water-Cooled Package 24 (1) Roof-Top 15 Chillers Reciprocating 20 Centrifugal 25 (1) Absorption 23 Heat Pumps Air-to-Air 15 Water-to-Air 24 (1) Furnaces (gas or oil) 18 Boilers (gas or oil) Hot-Water 24 - 35 Steam 25 - 30 Unit Heaters Gas-Fired or Electric 13 Hot-Water or Steam 20 Cooling Towers (metal or wood) Metal 22 (1) Wood 20
Note(s): 1) Data from 2005. All other data is from 1978.
Source(s): ASHRAE, 2007 ASHRAE Handbook: HVAC Applications, Table 4, p. 36.3 for median service lifetimes.
5.3.10
Main Residential Heating Fuel, by Vintage, as of 2001 (Percent of Total Households) 1949 or Before 0.676 0.107 0.141 0.057 0.019 100% 1950 to 1959 67% 16% 13% 3% 1% 100% 1960 to 1969 63% 22% 8% 4% 2% 100% 1970 to 1979 42% 45% 4% 4% 4% 100% 1980 to 1989 41% 50% 2% 5% 2% 100% 1990 to 2001 56% 36% 2% 5% 1% 100%
Heating Fuel Natural Gas Electricity Fuel Oil LPG Other (1) Total
Note(s):
Source(s): EIA, Residential Energy Consumption Survey 2001 , June 2004, Table HC 5.4.
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5.3.11
September 2008
Main Residential Heating Equipment as of 1987, 1993, 1997, and 2001 (Percent of Total Households) 1987 55% 35% 10% 6% 4% 20% 8% 5% 6% 1% 12% 7% 4% 1% 13% 100% 1993 53% 36% 9% 4% 3% 26% 10% 8% 7% 1% 11% 6% 5% 0% 11% 100% 1997 53% 38% 7% 4% 4% 29% 11% 10% 7% 2% 9% 5% 4% 0% 9% 100% 2001 55% 42% 7% 3% 3% 29% 12% 10% 6% 2% 7% 4% 3% 0% 8% 100%
Equipment Type Natural Gas Central Warm-Air Furnace Steam or Hot-Water System Floor/Wall/Pipeless Furnace Room Heater/Other Electricity Central Warm-Air Furnace Heat Pump Built-In Electric Units Other Fuel Oil Steam or Hot-Water System Central Warm-Air Furnace Other Other Total
Note(s):
Other equipment includes wood, LPG, kerosene, other fuels, and none.
Table HC3-2a, p. 55; EIA, Housing Characteristics 1993, June 1995, Table 3.7b, p. 63; and EIA, Housing Characteristics 1987, May 1989, Table 14, p. 33.
Source(s): EIA, A Look at Residential Energy Consumption in 2001, Apr. 2004, Table HC3-2a; EIA, A Look at Residential Energy Consumption in 1997, Nov. 1999,
5.3.12
Main Commercial Heating and Cooling Equipment as of 1995, 1999, and 2003 (Percent of Total Floorspace) (1) 1995 1999 29% 38% 29% 29% 29% 26% 25% 21% 10% 13% 10% 8% 11% 6% 2003 (2) 0.278 0.315 0.194 0.303 0.136 0.08 0.05 Cooling Equipment Packaged Air Conditioning Units Individual Air Conditioners Central Chillers Residential Central Air Conditioners Heat Pumps District Chilled Water Swamp Coolers Other 1995 45% 21% 19% 16% 12% 4% 4% 2% 1999 54% 21% 19% 12% 14% 4% 3% 2% 2003 (2) 0.463 0.194 0.18 0.17 0.14 0.044 0.024 0.019
Heating Equipment Packaged Heating Units Boilers Individual Space Heaters Furnaces Heat Pumps District Heat Other
Note(s):
1) Heating and cooling equipment percentages of floorspace total more than 100% since equipment shares floorspace. 2) Malls are no longer included in most CBECs tables; therefore, some data is not directly comparable to past CBECs.
Aug. 2002, Tables B33 and B34 for 1999; and, EIA, 2003 Commercial Buildings Energy Consumption and Expenditures: Consumption and Expenditures Tables, June 2006, Tables B39 and B41 for 2003.
Source(s): EIA, Commercial Building Characteristics 1995, Oct. 1998, Tables B34 and B36 for 1995, and EIA, Commercial Building Characteristics 1999,
5.3.13
Main Commercial Primary Energy Use of Heating and Cooling Equipment as of 1995 | | | | | | | | | | Cooling Equipment Packaged Air Conditioning Units Room Air Conditioning PTAC (2) Centrifugal Chillers Reciprocating Chillers Rotary Screw Chillers Absorption Chillers Heat Pumps
Heating Equipment Packaged Heating Units Boilers Individual Space Heaters Furnaces Heat Pumps District Heat Unit Heater PTHP & WLHP (1)
Note(s):
1) PTHP = Packaged Terminal Heat Pump, WLHP = Water Loop Heat Pump. 2) PTAC = Packaged Terminal Air Conditioner
and Heating Systems, Apr. 2001, Figure 5-5, p. 5-14 for cooling and Figure 5-10, p. 5-18 for heating.
Source(s): BTS/A.D. Little, Energy Consumption Characteristics of Commercial Building HVAC Systems, Volume 1: Chillers, Refrigerant Compressors,
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5.3.14 Halocarbon Environmental Coefficients and Principal Uses 100-Year Global Ozone Depletion Warming Potential Potential (ODP) (CO2 = 1) (Relative to CFC-11) #### #### #### #### #### 1 1 0.8 1 0.6
September 2008
Principal Uses Blowing Agent, Chillers Auto A/C, Chillers, & Blowing Agent Solvent Solvent Solvent, Refrigerant
Hydrochlorofluorocarbons HCFC-22 (2) #### HCFC-123 120 HCFC-124 620 HCFC-141b 700 HCFC-142b #### Bromofluorocarbons Halon-1211 Halon-1301 Hydrofluorocarbons HFC-23 HFC-125 HFC-134a HFC-152a (1) HFC-227ea
Note(s):
#### ####
3 10
0 0 0 0 0
HCFC Byproduct CFC/HCFC Replacement Auto A/C, Refrigeration Aerosol Propellant CFC Replacement
1) R-500: 74% CFC-12 and 26% HFC-152a. 2) R-502: 49% HCFC-22 and 51% CFC-115.
and uses; EPA for halon ODPs; AFEAS Internet Homepage, Atmospheric Chlorine: CFCs and Alternative Fluorocarbons, Feb. 1997 for remaining ODPs; and ASHRAE, 1993 ASHRAE Handbook: Fundamental, p. 16.3 for Notes 1 and 2; EPA, Emissions of Greenhouse Gases in the U.S. 2005, Table ES-1, p. ES-3 for GWP of HFCs.
Source(s): Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change, Climate Change 2001: The Scientific Basis, Jan. 2001, Table 3, p. 47 for global warming potentials
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Buildings Energy Data Book: 5.3 Heating, Cooling, and Ventilation Equipment
5.3.15 Conversion and Replacements of Centrifugal CFC Chillers
September 2008
Pre-1995 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 (2) 2006 (2) 2007 (2) Total
Note(s):
Conversions #### #### #### 815 905 491 913 452 360 334 165 155 130 108 9,641
Replacements 7,208 3,915 3,045 3,913 3,326 3,085 3,235 3,324 3,433 2,549 2,883 2,674 2,860 3,002 48,452
Total 9,512 5,113 4,356 4,728 4,231 3,576 4,148 3,776 3,793 2,883 3,048 2,829 2,990 3,110 58,093
Cumulative Percent of 1992 Chillers (1) 12% 18% 24% 30% 35% 39% 45% 49% 54% 55% 59% 62% 66% 70%
1) In 1992, approximately 80,000 centrifugal CFC chillers were in service, 82% of which used CFC-11, 12% CFC-12, and 6% CFC-113, CFC-114, or R-500. 2) Projected.
ARI, New Legislation Would Spur Replacement of CFC Chillers, Mar. 31, 2004; ARI, Economy Affects CFC Chiller Phase-out, Apr. 2, 2003; ARI, Half way Mark in Sight for Replacement and Conversion of CFC Chiller Used for Air Conditioning of Buildings, Apr. 11, 2001; ARI, Replacement and Conversion of CFC Chillers Dipped in 1999 Assuring Steady Demand for Non-CFC Units for a Decade, Mar. 29, 2000; ARI, Survey Estimates Long Use of CFC Chillers Nearly Two-Thirds of Units Still in Place, Apr. 15, 1999; ARI, CFCs Widely Used to Cool Buildings Despite 28-Month Ban on Production, Apr. 8, 1998; ARI, 1997 Chiller Survey, Apr. 9, 1997; Air Conditioning, Heating and Refrigeration News, Apr. 1996, p. 1; and ARI's web site, www.ari.org, Chiller Manufacturer Survey Confirms Slow Pace of Conversion and Replacements of CFC Chillers, Apr. 12, 1995.
Source(s): ARI, Replacement and Conversion of CFC for a Decade Chillers Slower Than Expected Assuring Steady Demand for Non-CFC Units, Apr. 25, 2005;
5.3.16
Estimated U.S. Emissions of Halocarbons, 1987-2001 (MMT CO2 Equivalent) 1987 391 1166 498 N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. 116 N.A. 0 N.A. N.A. 48 N.A. N.A. 2219 1990 246 1194 158 46 30 1 12 136 0 0 0 0 36 0 1 1861 1992 207 853 103 29 27 1 12 135 0 0 0 2 36 1 1 1408 1995 167 549 52 16 22 1 12 123 0 3 14 18 28 2 19 1024 1998 115 223 0 1 19 1 13 128 0 4 19 22 41 4 35 624 2000 105 182 0 N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. 134 N.A. N.A. 4 26 31 5 44 532 2001 105 226 0 N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. 137 N.A. N.A. 4 26 22 6 41 566
Gas Chlorofluorocarbons CFC-11 CFC-12 CFC-113 CFC-114 CFC-115 Bromofluorocarbons Halon-1211 Halon-1301 Hydrochlorofluorocarbons HCFC-22 HCFC-123 HCFC-124 HCFC-141b HCFC-142b Hydrofluorocarbons HFC-23 HFC-125 HFC-134a Total
Source(s): Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change, Climate Change 2001: The Scientific Basis, Jan. 2001, Table 3, p. 47 for GWPs; EIA, Emissions of Greenhouse Gases in the U.S. 2001, Dec. 2002, Table 29, p. 71 and Table D2, p. D-5 for 1990-2001 emissions; EPA, Inventory of U.S. Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Sinks: 19901998, Table ES-6, p. ES-9 for HFCs and Annex L, Table L-1, p. L-2 for 1990-1998 ozone-depleting refrigerants; and EIA, Emissions of Greenhouse Gases in the U.S. 1985-1994, Oct. 1995, Table 34, p. 54 for 1987.
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September 2008
According to RECS, 1.1 million households did not use hot water. The total only reflects those household that used hot water.
EIA, Residential Energy Consumption Survey 2005, Table HC 2.8, June 2008.
5.4.2
2005 Water Heater Stock for Residential Buildings, By Storage Type (Percent of Households) Used by One Unit 17.1 17% 52.4 53% 27.1 27% 1.1 1% 1.9 2% 99.6 100% Used by Multiple Units 1.4 0.137 2.4 0.235 2.8 0.275 0.2 0.02 3.4 0.333 10.2 1 Total 18.5 17% 54.8 50% 29.9 27% 1.3 1% 5.3 5% 109.8 100%
Small (30 gallons or less) Medium (31 to 49 gallons) Large (50 gallons or more) Tankless water heater No Separate Water Heater Total(1)
Note(s):
Souce(s):
According to RECS, 1.1 million households did not use hot water. The total only reflects those household that used hot water. EIA, Residential Energy Consumption Survey 2005, Table HC 2.8, June 2008.
5.4.3
2006 Water Heater Manufacturer Market Shares (Percent of Products Produced) Total Units Shipped: 9,446,076
Company Market Share (%) Rheem Manufacturing 37% A.O. Smith/State Industries 23% American Water Heater 14% Bradford-White 14% Others 12% Total 100%
Source(s): Appliance Magazine, A Portrait of the U.S. Appliance Industry, Sept. 2007, p. 63.
5.4.4
2003 Water Heater Stock for Commercial Buildings, By Fuel Type (Percent of Total Buildings)
41% 31% 2% 1% 3%
EIA, 2003 Commercial Buildings Energy Consumption Survey: Buildings Characteristics, June 2006, Table B31, p. 175.
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September 2008
Residential Type Electric Storage Electric Instantaneous Electric Heat Pump Gas-Fired Storage Gas-Fired Instantaneous Oil-Fired Storage Solar Commercial Type Electric Storage Gas-Fired Storage Oil-Fired Storage
Note(s):
Minimum New Efficiency (2) 0.917 0.93 0.917 0.594 0.544 0.514 0.8
2005 Best-Available New Efficiency 0.95 0.99 2.28 0.65 0.85 0.68 4.8
1) EF = energy factor and SEF = solar energy factor, which is the hot water energy delivered by the solar system divided by the electric or gas energy input to the system. 2) Based on a 40-gallon residential type tank. 3) Included in storage stock efficiency.
Ratings for the Residential and Water Heating Equipment, Aug. 2005 for best-available efficiencies and minimum efficiencies; and SRCC, Summary of SRCC Certified Solar Collector and Water Heating System Ratings, Apr. 2000, p. S16 - S20 for SEFs, Table 2.2, p. 4.
Source(s): EIA, Supplement to the AEO 2007, Feb. 2007, Table 21 and Table 22 for stock efficiencies; GAMA, Consumer's Directory of Certified Efficiency
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September 2008
Total Market Size Air-Handling Units 962 Cooling Towers 497 Pumps 310 Central System Terminal Boxes 179 Classroom Unit Ventilator 149 Fan Coil Units 114
Source(s): BTS/A.D. Little, Energy Consumption Characteristics of Commercial Building HVAC Systems, Volume II: Thermal Distribution, Auxiliary Equipment, and Ventilation, Oct. 1999, Table 4-1, p. 4-4; and EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Appendix D, p. 377 for price deflators.
5.5.2
U.S. Commercial Buildings Conditioned Floorspace, Building Type and System Type (Million SF) Individual AC 805 83 134 1,669 333 1,257 371 119 4,771 Packaged 2,204 534 1,100 557 283 5,820 4,450 3,337 1,482 19,767 Central VAV 551 401 85 1,081 2,322 847 5,287 Central FCU 466 334 707 831 484 2,822 Central CAV 212 802 85 249 1,161 741 102 3,352 Not Cooled 3,522 20 64 159 779 2,507 561 2,168 2,285 12,065 Total 7,760 554 1,247 2,387 3,608 10,821 10,235 7,464 3,988 48,064
Education Food Sales Food Service Health Care Lodging Mercantile and Service Office Public Buildings Warehouse/Storage Total
Source(s): BTS/A.D. Little, Energy Consumption Characteristics of Commercial Building HVAC Systems, Volume II: Thermal Distribution, Auxiliary Equipment, and Ventilation, Oct. 1999, Table A2-12, p. B2-1.
5.5.3
Thermal Distribution Design Load and Electricity Intensities, by Building Activity Design Load Intensity (W/SF) 0.5 1.1 1.5 1.5 0.5 0.9 1.3 1.2 0.4 1.0 End Use Intensity (kWh/SF) 1.3 6.4 6.4 5.6 1.9 2.7 3.3 3.0 1.8 2.8
Education Food Sales Food Service Health Care Lodging Mercantile and Service Office Public Assembly Warehouse All Buildings
Source(s): BTS/A.D. Little, Energy Consumption Characteristics of Commercial Building HVAC Systems, Volume II: Thermal Distribution, Auxiliary Equipment, and Ventilation, Oct. 1999, Table 5-11, p. 5-27.
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Design Load Intensity (W/SF) Central VAV Central CAV Condenser Fan Cooling Tower Fan 0.162 0.2 Condenser Water Pump 0.162 0.2 Chilled Water Pump 0.153 0.2 Supply & Return Fans 0.674 0.5 Chiller/Compressor 1.87 1.8
0.559 3.28
End Use Intensity (kWh/SF) Central VAV Central CAV Packaged CAV 0.2 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.3 0.1 0.2 1.2 1.9 1.9 1.7 2.3 4.0
Source(s): BTS/A.D. Little, Energy Consumption Characteristics of Commercial Building HVAC Systems, Volume II: Thermal Distribution, Auxiliary Equipment, and Ventilation, Oct. 1999, Table 5-11 p. 5-22.
5.5.5
Typical Commercial Building Thermal Energy Distribution Design Load Intensities (Watts per SF) Other Cooling Tower Fan Air-Cooled Chiller Condenser Fan Exhaust Fans (2) Condenser Fans
Distribution System Fans Central System Supply Fans Central System Return Fans Terminal Box Fans Fan-Coil Unit Fans (1) Packaged or Split System Indoor Blower Pumps Chilled Water Pump Condenser Water Pump Heating Water Pump
Note(s):
0.3 - 1.0 0.1 - 0.4 0.5 0.1 - 0.3 0.6 0.1 - 0.3 0.1 - 0.2 0.1 - 0.2
1) Unducted units are lower than those with some ductwork. 2) Strong dependence on building type.
and Ventilation, Oct. 1999, Table 3-1, p. 3-6.
Source(s): BTS/A.D. Little, Energy Consumption Characteristics of Commercial Building HVAC Systems, Volume II: Thermal Distribution, Auxiliary Equipment,
5.5.6
1999 Energy Efficient Motors, Replacements and Sales, by Horsepower Class Existing Units in Use Horsepower (thousands) (10^6) 20,784 59.6 6,927 81.8 2,376 78.2 738 59.6 412 56.5 | | | | | | | | Replacements Energy Efficient Share of New Motors 17% 29% 45% 52% 65%
Source(s): Electrical Apparatus Service Association, Past Trends and Probably Future Changes in the Electric Motor Industry 1990-1999, 2001, p. 18 for existing stock and retirements and p. 28 for energy efficient motor sales.
5.5.7
Source(s): Electrical Apparatus Service Association, Past Trends and Probably Future Changes in the Electric Motor Industry 1990-1999, 2001, p. 30.
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September 2008
Commercial Trends T12 Rapid-Start Fluorescent (Mainly 4') T8 Medium Bi-Pin Fluorescent (Mainly 4') Total (mainly) 4' 2' U-Shaped T12 2' U-Shaped T8 Total 2' U lamp 8' Slimline T12 (Mainly 8') 8' Slimline T8 (Mainly 8') Total Slimline (Mainly 8') 8' HO T12 (Mainly 8') 8' HO T8 (Mainly 8') Total HO (Mainly 8') Residential Trends Incandescent A-line Screw-Based Compact Fluorescent- Census Total Medium Screw-Based Market Commerical and Residential Trends PAR Incandescent R Incandescent PAR 38 Halogen PAR30 and PAR20 Halogen Total Reflector Lamps
Note(s):
1,568 69 1,637
1,526 52 1,577
1,542 66 1,608
1,470 93 1,563
9 89 41 33 172
7 96 46 27 176
5 103 46 31 185
5 112 50 36 203
15 125 46 40 226
2001-2005 growth rate for A-line Incandescent was -2.62% while Screw-based Compact Fluorescent had a growth rate of 10.17% over the same period.
Source(s): National Electrical Manufactors Association, Special Bulletin for the Lamp Section (2-LL), June 2006, page 1.
5.6.2
Value of Electric Lighting Fixture Shipments ($Million) 1985 786.8 1,832.3 389.2 1,001.2 905.5 1990 827.6 2,379.7 529.4 1,620.7 1,061.5 1995 983.8 2,797.3 676.3 N.A. 1,473.0 2000 1,296.5 3,506.7 718.3 N.A. 1,957.4 2001 983.9 3,239.1 628.1 N.A. 1,923.2
Lighting Fixture Type Residential Commercial/Institutional (except spotlight) Industrial Vehicular (1) Outdoor
Note(s):
Source(s): DOC, Electric Lighting Fixtures MA 335L(01)-1, Jan. 2003 for 2000 and 2001; DOC, Current Industrial Reports: Electric Lighting Fixtures,
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September 2008
Year 1985 1986 1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2005
Note(s):
Standard Magnetic Type (1) Electronic Type Total Quantity Value Quantity Value Quantity Value Electronic Type as a % (million) ($million) (million) ($million) (million) ($million) of Total Units Shipped 70.1 398.9 N.A N.A. 70.1 398.9 N.A. 69.4 396.1 0.4 11.8 69.8 407.9 1% 74.6 450.9 1.1 25.5 75.7 476.4 1% 78.4 546.3 3.0 69.3 81.4 615.6 4% 83.7 537.7 13.3 274.6 97.0 812.3 14% 83.5 550.0 24.6 390.8 108.1 940.7 23% 67.0 457.8 30.3 451.4 97.3 909.2 31% 63.9 401.4 39.8 512.8 103.7 914.3 38% 55.4 343.0 49.3 555.5 104.8 898.5 47% 40.7 263.3 53.8 573.1 94.5 836.4 57% Green Roof Industry Survey, Green Roof Infrastructure Monitor, (Reporting Years 2006, 2007, and 2008) 66% 30.5 218.4 59.2 579.4 89.7 797.8 22.2 175.1 61.3 594.6 83.5 769.8 73%
1) Standard magnetic type includes uncorrected and corrected power-factor type ballasts.
Fluorescent Lamp Ballasts MQ36C(99)-5, July 2000, Table 1 for 1990-1999; and DOC, Current Industrial Reports: Fluorescent Lamp Ballasts, MQ36C(95), 1996, Table 1 for 1985-1989.
Source(s): DOC Current Industrial Reports: Fluorescent Lamp Ballasts, MQ335C(05)-5, July 2006 for 2000-2005; DOC, Current Industrial Reports:
5.6.4
2001 Total Lighting Technology Electricity Consumption, by Sector (Billion kWh per Year) (1) Residential Commercial 103 21 0 50 157 13 0 7 34 6 0 391 26% 5% 0% 13% 40% 3% 0% 2% 9% 1% 0% 100% Industrial 2 0 0 23 49 1 0 3 25 5 0 108 2% 0% 0% 21% 45% 1% 0% 3% 23% 5% 0% 100% Other (2) 5 1 N.A. 0 0 N.A. 1 12 4 30 3 56 10% 2% Total 287 28 0 72 206 14 19 22 62 41 3 756 38% 4% 0% 10% 27% 2% 3% 3% 8% 5% 0% 100%
Incandescent Standard Halogen Fluorescent T5 T8 T12 Compact Miscellaneous HID Mercury Vapor Metal Halide HP Sodium LP Sodium Total (3)
Note(s):
87% 3%
1% 9% 0% 0% 100%
1) Lumens-hour is a measure of lighting output; Watt-hour is a measure of electrical input for lighting. A value of zero indicates less than 0.5 billion kWh/year. 2) Includes stationary aviation, billboard, and traffic and street lighting. 3) Lighting consumed 756 10^9 kWh of energy in 2001. This amount is equivalent to 99% of the energy generated by all 104 nuclear power plants in the same year.
EIA, Annual Energy Review 2003, Table 9.2 Nuclear Power Plant Operations, p. 271, for note 3.
Source(s): BTS/Navigant Consulting, U.S. Lighting Market Characterization, Phase I National Lighting Inventory and Energy Consumption Estimate, July 2002;
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Commercial 1,384 392 13 4,208 11,752 735 24 261 2,202 587 18 21,574 6% 2% 0% 20% 54% 3% 0% 1% 10% 3% 0% 100%
Industrial 22 13 0 1,925 3,781 35 3 149 1,605 562 4 8,100 0% 0% 0% 24% 47% 0% 0% 2% 20% 7% 0% 100%
Total 3,997 530 13 6,134 15,535 827 1,169 965 4,055 4,539 430 38,194 10% 1% 0% 16% 41% 2% 3% 3% 11% 12% 1% 100%
66% 3%
1% 29% 1% 0% 100%
1) Lumens-hour is a measure of lighting output; Watt-hour is a measure of electrical input for lighting. A value of zero indicates less than 0.5 billion kWh/year. 2) Includes stationary aviation, billboard, and traffic and street lighting.
Source(s): BTS/Navigant Consulting, U.S. Lighting Market Characterization, Phase I National Lighting Inventory and Energy Consumption Estimate, July 2002.
5.6.6
2001 Lamp Wattage, Number of Lamps, and Hours of Usage (Weighted Average) Lamp Wattage (Watts per lamp) Number of Lamps per Building Res Com Ind Other (1) Res Com Ind Hours of Usage per Day Res Com Ind Other 2 2 (2) N.A. N.A. N.A. 2 2 3 N.A. 3 N.A. 9 10 13 10 10 11 10 10 10 10 10 14 14 18 13 13 14 11 12 14 13 12 8 8 N.A. 7 7 N.A. 11 11 10 11 12
Incandescent Standard Halogen Fluorescent T5 T8 T12 CFL Miscellaneous HID Mercury Vapor Metal Halide HP Sodium LP Sodium
Note(s):
70 12 1 93 191 32 1 1 4 1 0
12 1 0 671 646 13 2 8 47 12 0
1) Other includes stationary aviation, billboard, and traffic and street lighting. 2) A value of zero indicates less than 0.5.
Source(s): BTS/Navigant Consulting, U.S. Lighting Market Characterization, Phase I National Lighting Inventory and Energy Consumption Estimate, July 2002.
5.6.7
2003 Lighted Floorspace for the Stock of Commercial Buildings, by Type of Lamp (1) Lighted Floorspace (Billion SF) (2) 59.7 38.5 27.6 20.6 17.7 Percent of Lighted Floorspace 96% 62% 44% 33% 29% Total Lighted Floorspace: 62.06 Billion SF
Type of Lamp Standard Fluorescent Incandescent Compact Fluorescent High-Intensity Discharge Halogen
Note(s):
1) Mall buildings are no longer included in most CBECs tables; therefore, some data are not directly comparable to past CBECs. 2) The percentages of lighted floorspace total more than 100% since most floorspace is lighted by more than one type of lamp.
Source(s): EIA, 2003 Commercial Buildings Energy Consumption Survey: Building Characteristics Tables, June 2006, Table B44, p. 220.
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5.6.8
2003 Lighting Consumption and Energy Intensities, by Commercial Building Type Percent of Total Lighted Floorspace 0.143 0.018 0.024 0.046 0.028 0.018 0.074 0.162 0.063 0.1 0.177 0.057 0.016 0.054 0.057 0.132 0.025 0.015 Total Annual Lighting Energy (billion KWh) 33.1 0.065 13.5 0.026 12.3 0.024 30.8 0.06 22.3 0.043 8.2 0.016 36.3 0.071 90.3 0.176 32.5 0.063 57.7 0.113 82.4 0.16 7.9 0.015 5.3 0.01 5.0 0.01 18.5 0.036 38.7 0.075 17.3 0.034 1.172 0.002 513.2 1 Annual Lighting End-Use Intensity (kWh/SF) 3.4 10.8 7.4 9.7 11.8 6.6 7.1 8.1 7.5 8.4 6.8 2.1 4.8 1.3 4.6 3.8 10.0 0.5
Building Type Education Food Sales Food Service Health Care Inpatient Outpatient Lodging Mercantile Retail (Other Than Mall) Enclosed and Strip Malls Office Public Assembly Public Order and Safety Religious Worship Service Warehouse and Storage Other Vacant Total (1)
Source(s): EIA, 2003 Commericial Buildings Energy Consumption Survey Characteristics and End-Uses, Oct. 2006 and Sept. 2008, Table A1 and Table E1A.
September 2008
5.6.9 Typical Efficacies and Lifetimes of Lamps (1) Efficacy (lumens/Watt) 10 - 19 14 - 20 25 - 55 35 - 87 35 - 92 40 - 70 25 - 50 50 - 115 50 - 124 18 - 180 (3) Typical Rated Lifetime (hours) 750 - 2,500 2,000 - 3,500 6,000 - 7,500 7,500 - 20,000 7,500 - 20,000 10,000 29,000 30,00 - 20,000 29,000 18,000 (4)
Current Technology Incandescent Halogen Fluorescent - T5 Fluorescent - T8 Fluorescent - T12 Compact Fluorescent Mercury Vapor Metal Halide High-Pressure Sodium Low-Pressure Sodium Solid State Lighting
Note(s):
1) Theoretical maximum luminous efficacy of white light is 220 lumens/Watt. 2) CRI = Color Rendition Index, which indicates a lamp's ability to show natural colors. 3) The DOE Solid State Lighting program has set an efficacy goal twice that of fluorescent lights (160 lumen per Watt). 4) Has not been determined.
Energy Consumption Estimate, Sept. 2002, Appendix A, p. 74; DOE/Navigant Consulting, Solid State Lighting Research and Development Portfolio, Mar. 2006, p 55.
Source(s): DOE, EERE, Building Technology Program/Navigant Consulting, U.S. Lighting Market Characterization, Volume I: National Lighting Inventory and
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September 2008
Appliance Type Refrigerator-Freezers (1) Freezers (chest and upright) Refrigerated Display Cases Unit Coolers Ice-Making Machines Water Cooler Beverage Vending Machine
Note(s):
2006 (thousands) 11,966 2,199 181 221 386 300 (2) N.A.
2006 Value of Shipments ($million) 5,419 N.A. N.A. 158 678 N.A. N.A.
Source(s): Appliance Magazine, 54th Annual Statistical Review, May 2007, p. S1-S4 for refrigerator, freezer, refrigerated display cases, water cooler, and beverage
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September 2008
Appliance Type Room Air Conditioners Ranges (total) Electric Ranges Gas Ranges Microwave Ovens/Ranges Clothes Washers Clothes Dryers (total) Electric Dryers Gas Dryers Water Heaters (total) Electric (1,2) Gas and Oil (2) Solar (3) Office Equipment Personal Computers (4) Copiers Printers Scanners
Note(s):
1990 (1000) 3,799 5,873 3,350 2,354 7,693 5,591 4,160 3,190 970 7,252 3,246 4,005 N.A.
2000 (1000) 6,496 8,202 5,026 3,176 12,644 7,495 6,575 5,095 1,480 9,329 4,299 5,006 24
2005 (1000) 8,024 9,963 6,201 3,762 13,862 9,394 8,114 6,408 1,706 9,455 4,572 4,884 N.A.
2005 Value of Shipments (5) ($million) 1,050 4,491 2,753 1,738 1,377 3,373 2,486 N.A. N.A. 1,609 638 970 N.A.
1) Sales of heat pump water heaters were less than 2,000 units in 1994, down from its peak of 8,000 in 1985. 2) Includes residential and small commercial units. 3) Shipments and value of shipments of entire systems. 4) Includes workstations, laptops, and notebooks. 5) Value of shipments are based on Census unit shipment data, which is about 31 million units lower than industry data shown.
for 2000-2005 shipments and Table 6, p. 19 for value of shipments of ranges, microwave ovens, laundry equipment, and room air conditioners; GAMA, Statistical Highlights: Ten Year Summary, 1987-1996; GAMA, Statistical Highlights: Ten Year Summary, 1994- 2003 for water heater shipments; GAMA, Statistical Highlights, Dec. 2006 for 2005 water heater shipments; DOC, Current Industrial Reports: Major Household Appliances, MA335F(02)-1, July 2003, Table 2 for value of water heater shipments; EIA, 2000 Solar Thermal and Photovoltaic Collector Manufacturing Activities, July 2001, Table 17, p. 20 for solar water heater data; BTS/OBE, Market Disposition of High-Efficiency Water Heating Equipment, Nov. 1996, p. I-8 for HPWH note; DOC, Current Industrial Reports: Computers and Office and Accounting Machines, MA334R(05)-1, Aug. 2006, Table 2 for value of computer shipments; Appliance, 52nd Annual Statistical Review, May 2005, p. S1-S4 for office equipment shipments; and DOC, Current Industrial Reports: Major Household Appliances, MA335f(06)-1, June 2007, Table 2 for 2005 water heater value of shipments.
Source(s): AHAM, AHAM Fact Book 2000, 2000, Tables 7 and 8, for 1990 data except water heaters; AHAM, AHAM 2005 Fact Book, 2006, Table 7
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September 2008
Appliance Type Room Air Conditioners Refrigerators Freezers Electric Ranges/Cooktops Gas Ranges/Cooktops Microwave Ovens Clothes Washers Electric Clothes Dryers Gas Clothes Dryers Personal Computers Number of U.S. Households
2005 Households 27.4 25% 104.7 96% 36.1 33% 71.0 65% 42.2 39% 97.2 89% 90.1 83% 67.6 62% 20.7 19% N.A. N.A. 108.8
Source(s): AHAM, AHAM 2005 Fact Book, 2006, Table 93, p. 28 for 1982, 1990, 2001 and 2005; AHAM, 2000 Major Home Appliance Industry Fact Book, Nov. 2000, Table 13, p. 21 for 1996; Consumer Electronic Manufacturers Association's Home Page, 1999 for 1997 personal computers; EIA, AEO 1995, Jan. 1995, Table B4, p. 104 for 1990 households; EIA, AEO 2004, Jan. 2004, Table A4 for 2001 households.
November 2008
5.7.4 2007 Refrigerator Manufacturer Market Shares (Percent of Products Produced) Market Share (%) 29% 25% 25% 10% 4% 1% 6% 100% Total Units Shipped: 11,267,000
Company GE Electrolux (Frigidaire) Whirlpool Maytag (Admiral) Haier W.C. Wood Others Total
Source(s): Appliance Magazine, A Portrait of the U.S. Appliance Industry, Sept. 2008, p. 40.
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5.7.5
Refrigerator-Freezer Sizes and Energy Factors (Shipment-Weighted Averages) Average Volume (cu. ft.) 18.2 19.6 19.5 20.5 20.0 21.9 21.9 22.2 22.3 21.5 20.7 22.3 21.9 Consumption/Unit (kWh/yr) 1,726 1,278 1,058 916 649 704 565 520 514 500 490 506 498 Best-Available (kWh/yr) N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. 555 523 438 428 428 402 417 464 459
1972 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007
Note(s):
The average stock energy uses for refrigerator-freezers was 1,220 kWh/yr in 1990, 1,319 kWh/yr in 1997, and 1,462 kWh/yr in 2001.
AHAM, 2005 AHAM Fact Book, 2006, Table 17, p. 40 for 1990-2004; AHAM, 1991, 1993-1999 Directory of Certified Refrigerators and Freezers for 1993-1999 best-available data (at 19.6 or more cu. ft.); LBNL, Center for Building Science News, Summer 1995, p. 6 for 1990 portion of note; EIA, A Look at Residential Energy Consumption in 2001; Apr. 2004, Table CE5-1c for 2001 portion of note; EIA, A Look at Residential Energy Consumption in 1997, Nov. 1999, Table CE5-2c, p. 205 for 1997 portion of note; and ENERGY STAR certified products lists for 2001-2007 best available, http://www.energystar.gov/ia/products/prod_lists/appliances_prod_list.xls.
Source(s): AHAM, Efficiency and Consumption Trends 2008; AHAM, 2000 Major Home Appliance Industry Fact Book, 2000, Table 25, p. 30 for 1972-1985;
November 2008
5.7.6 2007 Room Air Conditioner Manufacturer Market Shares (Percent of Products Produced) Market Share (%) 32% 12% 13% 13% 8% 5% 4% 4% 3% 2% 4% 100% Total Units Shipped: 9,550,000
Company LG Electronics (Goldstar) Fedders Electrolux (Frigidaire) Whirlpool Haier Samsung Sharp Friedrich UTC/Carrier Matsushita Others Total
Source(s): Appliance Magazine, A Portrait of the U.S. Appliance Industry, Sept. 2008, p. 39.
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5.7.7
Room Air Conditioner Capacities and Energy Efficiencies (Shipment-Weighted Averages) Average Capacity (Btu/hr) 10,227 10,607 10,287 10,034 10,099 9,739 9,874 9,800 9,203 9,735 7,916 9,197 8,518 EER 6.0 7.0 7.7 8.7 9.0 9.3 9.6 9.8 9.8 9.7 10.0 10.0 9.8 Best-Available (EER) N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. 12.0 11.7 11.7 11.7 11.7 11.7 12.0 12.0 12.0
1972 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007
Source(s): AHAM, Efficiency and Consumption Trends 2008; AHAM, 1997 Major Appliance Industry Fact Book, Oct. 1997, Table 27, p. 32 for 1972; AHAM, AHAM 2003 Fact Book, 2003, Table 25, p. 45 for 1980-1985 average capacity and EER; AHAM, AHAM 2005 Fact Book, 2006, Table 19, p. 42 for 1990-2004 average capacity and EER; AHAM, 1994-1999 Directory of Certified Room Air Conditioners, Mar. 2000 for 1994-2000 best available; and ENERGY STAR certified products lists for 2001-2007 best available, http://www.energystar.gov/ia/products/prod_lists/appliances_prod_list.xls.
November 2008
5.7.8 2007 Clothes Washer Manufacturer Market Shares (Percent of Products Produced) Market Share (%) 51% 17% 16% 6% 2% 8% 100% Total Units Shipped: 9,002,000
Source(s): Appliance Magazine, A Portrait of the U.S. Appliance Industry, Sept. 2008, p. 40.
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September 2008
Total Electric Units Shipped: 6,035,000 Total Gas Units Shipped: 1,530,000
Source(s): Appliance Magazine, A Portrait of the U.S. Appliance Industry, Sept. 2008, p. 40.
5.7.10
2007 Range Manufacturer Market Shares (Percent of Products Produced) Electric Market Share (%) 48% 22% 9% 7% 5% 9% 100% Gas Market Share (%) 38% 11% 25% 14% 7% 5% 100%
Source(s): Appliance Magazine, A Portrait of the U.S. Appliance Industry, Sept. 2008, p. 40.
5.7.11
2006 Microwave Oven Manufacturer Market Shares (Percent of Products Produced) Market Share (%) 35% 21% 12% 8% 8% 4% 12% 100% Total Units Shipped: 13,889,429
Company LG Electronics (Goldstar) Sharp Samsung Daewoo Matsushita Whirlpool Others Total
Source(s): Appliance Magazine, A Portrait of the U.S. Appliance Industry, Sept. 2007, p. 63.
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September 2008
Canon Konica Minolta Ricoh Xerox Sharp Kyocera Mita Others Total
Source(s): Appliance Magazine, A Portrait of the U.S. Appliance Industry, Sept. 2008, p. 41.
5.7.13
2007 Personal Computer Manufacturer Market Shares (Percent of Products Produced) Desktop Computer Market Share (%) 32% 24% 5% 4% 3% 1% 0% N/A N/A N/A N/A 30% 100% Portable Computer Market Share (%) 25% 26% 4% 9% N/A N/A N/A 12% 6% 5% 1% 13% 100%
Company Dell Hewlett-Packard Gateway Apple Acer America IBM Micron Toshiba Levono (IBM) Sony Fujitsu Siemens Others Total
Total Desktop Computer Units Shipped: 34,211,601 Total Portable Computer Units Shipped: 30,023,844
Source(s): Appliance Magazine, A Portrait of the U.S. Appliance Industry, Sept. 2008, p. 41.
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September 2008
Company Hewlett-Packard Canon Epson Lexmark Dell Samsung Brother Oki Data Konica Minolta Panasonic TallyGenicom Others Total
Dot Matrix Market Share (%) Total Ink Jet Units Shipped: 6,392,177 N/A N/A Total Laser Units Shipped: 3,356,556 27% 11% Total Dot Matrix Units Shipped: 231,547 N/A N/A N/A 46% N/A 6% 5% 6% 100%
Source(s): Appliance Magazine, A Portrait of the U.S. Appliance Industry, Sept. 2008, p. 41.
5.7.15
Major Residential and Small Commercial Appliance Lifetimes, Ages, and Replacement Picture Typical Service Lifetime Range (years) 10 - 16 8 - 16 7 - 13 7 - 10 12 - 19 14 - 22 7 - 14 8 - 15 8 - 15 4 - 20 7 - 15 3-5 2-4 Average Lifetime (years) 12 11 9 9 16 17 11 12 12 13 11 4 3 2001 Average Stock Age (years) 8 12 8 N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. 9 9 N.A. N.A.
Appliance Type Refrigerators (1) Freezers Room Air Conditioners Microwave Ovens Ranges (2) Electric Gas Clothes Washers Clothes Dryers Electric Gas Water Heaters Electric Gas Facsimile Machines Portable Computers
Note(s):
Units to be Replaced During 2009 (1,000s) 7,924 2,020 6,496 12,725 4,348 2,594 6,835 4,115 1,195 4,147 4,671 3,838 20,350
1) Excluding compact refrigerators. 2) Ranges include free-standing, built-in, high-oven and cooktop/oven combination units.
EIA, A Look at Residential Energy Consumption in 2001, Apr. 2004, Table HC4-1a and Table HC5-1a for average stock ages.
Source(s): Appliance Magazine, A Portrait of the U.S. Appliance Industry, Sep. 2007, p. 65 - 66 for service and average lifetimes and units to be replaced;
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5.7.16
Other Major Appliance Efficiencies 2003 Stock Efficiency 0.40 0.92 2005 Stock Efficiency 0.71 0.51 2008 Best Available New Efficiency 1.39 2.79 2001 Best Available New Efficiency
Commercial Appliance Type Cooking Equipment: Electric Appliances Gas Appliances Laundry Equipment: Electric Drying Gas Drying Motors Office Equipment: Linear Power Supplies Switching Power Supplies Motors
Note(s):
EF/COP EF EF
EF EF EF
1) EF = Energy Factor. MEF = Modified Energy Factor. COP = Coefficient of Performance. 2) EF does not include remaining moisture content (RMC) of clothes. MEF includes RMC which shows how much the clothes dryer will be needed. 3) 1992.
efficiencies; DOE/EPA, ENERGY STAR Appliances, www.energystar.gov, Jan. 2009 for best-available dishwashers and clothes washers; EIA/Navigant Consulting, EIA - Technology Forecast Updates - Residential and Commercial Building Technologies - Reference Case, Sept. 2004, p. 34-37 for residential stock; EIA, Supplement to the AEO 2006, Feb. 2006, Table 22 for average cooking efficiency; and BTS/OBE, Characterization of Commercial Building Appliances, Aug. 1993 for commercial efficiencies.
Source(s): AHAM, Efficiency and Consumption Trends 2008; AHAM, AHAM 2005 Fact Book, 2006, Tables 21, p. 44 and Table 22, p. 45 for residential
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September 2008
Type Solar Thermal Collectors (3) Residential Commercial Industrial Utility Other Photovoltaics (kW) (5)
Note(s):
2006 Value of Shipments ($million) 121 N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. 1,155
1) Includes imports and exports; 2001 solar thermal collector imports were 3.5 million square feet, and exports were 0.8 million square feet. 2) Preliminary. 3) Solar thermal collectors: receive solar radiation, convert it to thermal energy, and are typically used for space heating, water heating, and heating swimming pools. 4) Industrial is included in Other. 5) Generate electricity by the conversion of solar radiation to electrical energy. 6) 1982.
EIA, Solar Thermal and Photovoltaic Collector Manufacturing Activities 2005, Aug. 2006, Table 37 and Table 38, p. 21 and 22 for 2004 collector data, Table 47, p. 31 for 2000-2005 PV shipments, and Table 50, p. 34 for PV value of shipments; EIA, Renewable Energy Annual 2001, Nov. 2002, Table 18, p. 19 for 2000 collector data; EIA, Annual Energy Review 1991, June 1992, Table 111, p. 251 for 1990 collector sector; and EIA, Annual Energy Review 2004, Aug. 2005, Table 10.5, p. 291 for 1980-1990 PV shipments.
Source(s): EIA, Solar Thermal and Photovoltaic Collector Manufacturing Activities 2006, Aug. 2006, Table 2.9, 2.10, 2.22, and 2.23, p. 20-21, 33-34 for 2005-2006;
5.8.2
Thermal Solar Collector Shipments, by End Use (including imports and exports) (Thousand SF) (1) 2000 7863 367 99 2 20 3 8354 2003 10800 511 76 0 23 34 0 11444 2004 2005 (2) 2006 (3) 13634 15041 15362 452 640 1136 13 228 330 0 2 3 16 16 66 0 0 0 0 114 3,847 (4) 14114 16041 20744
Type Pool Heating Hot Water Space Heating Space Cooling Combined Space/Water Heating Process Heating Electricity Generation Total
Note(s):
1) 5.8% of shipments are exported in 2005. 2) Approximately 51,000 systems in 2005. 3) Approximately 80,000 systems in 2006 4) 2005 to 2006 increase in electricity generation due to shipment to the Nevada Solar One Project.
and EIA, Solar Thermal and Photovoltaic Collector Manufacturing Activities 2005, Aug. 2006, Table 38, p. 22 for 2004-2005, Table 30, p. 14 for Note 1, and Table 39, p. 23 for Note 2; EIA, Solar Thermal and Photovoltaic Collector Manufacturing Activities 2006, Table 2.10, p. 21 for 2006
Source(s): EIA, Renewable Energy Annual 2001, Nov. 2002, Table 18, p. 19 for 2000; EIA, Renewable Energy Annual 2003, June 2005, Table 18, p. 10 for 2003;
January 2009
5.8.3 State California Florida Arizona Oregon Illinois 2007 Top Five Destinations of Thermal Solar Collector Shipments Percent of U.S. Unit Shipments 28% 26% 5% 4% 3%
Source(s): EIA, Solar Thermal Manufacturing Activities 2007, October 2008, Table 2.4, p. 11.
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September 2008
Thermal Solar Collector Manufacturer Statistics (1) Number of Manufacturers in 2007: Companies with 90% of their revenue coming from solar collector sales: Percentage of shipped solar collectors produced by top 5 manufacturers:
1) Preliminary.
60 36 86%
Source(s): EIA, Solar Thermal Collector Manufacturing Activities 2007, Oct. 2008, p. 2.
September 2008
5.8.5 Shipments of Photovoltaic Cells and Modules, by Market (Peak Kilowatts) (1) 1995 7,198 6,272 8,100 2,383 3,759 2,000 1,347 31,059 2000 28,808 24,814 13,692 5,502 6,298 4,417 4,690 88,221 2003(2) 27,951 23,389 32,604 11,089 8,474 5,538 313 109,357 2004 30,493 53,928 74,509 1,380 3,233 3,257 14,316 181,116 2005 22,199 75,040 89,459 1,621 143 28,683 9,772 226,916 2006 28,618 95,815 180,852 2,458 3,981 7,688 17,857 337,268
1) Includes imports and exports. 2) Due to rounding, sum does not equal total.
Collector Manufacturing Activities 2003, Sept. 2004, Table 30, p.14; 'EIA, Solar Thermal and Photovoltaic Collector Manufacturing Activities 2001, Nov. 2002, Table 30, p. 23; and EIA, Solar Thermal and Photovoltaic Collector Manufacturing Activities 1997, Feb. 1998, Table 29, p. 31.
Source(s): EIA, Solar Thermal and Photovoltaic Collector Manufacturing Activities 2005, Aug. 2006, Table 51, p. 35; EIA, Solar Thermal and Photovoltaic
January 2009
5.8.6 Annual Shipments of Photovoltaic Cells and Modules (Peak Kilowatts) Number of Companies 25 21 21 19 21 19 19 20 19 29 41 46
1) Preliminary.
EIA, Solar Photovoltaic Cell/Module Manufacturing Activities 2007, December 2008, Table 3.1 and Table 3.2, p. 8-9.
Year 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007(1)
Note(s):
Domestic 13,016 12,561 15,069 21,225 19,838 36,310 45,313 48,664 78,346 134,465 206,511 280,475
Exports 22,448 33,793 35,493 55,562 68,382 61,356 66,778 60,693 102,770 92,451 130,757 237,209
Total 35,464 46,354 50,562 76,787 88,220 97,666 112,091 109,357 181,116 226,916 337,268 517,684
Source(s): EIA, Solar Thermal and Photovoltaic Collector Manufacturing Activities 2006, October 2007, Table 2.17 and Table 2.19, p. 28 and p. 30;
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September 2008
Source(s): EIA, Solar Photovoltaic Cell/Module Manufacturing Activities 2007, Dec. 2008, Table 3.14, p. 22.
September 2008
5.8.8 Annual New Installations of Grid-Tied Photovoltaic Cells and Modules, by Market (MW) 2002 9.6 8.0 2.0 3.0 22.6 51.1 3,438 2003 13.3 25.4 3.0 1.7 43.4 94.5 4,217 2004 21.6 29.6 1.8 1.7 54.7 149.2 6,275 2005 21.5 42.1 0.6 3.2 67.4 216.6 6,339 2006 37.9 60.6 0.2 4.4 103.1 319.8 10,634 2007 53.3 85.7 8.7 2.4 150.1 469.9 13,287
Peak Capacity by Use Residential Non-Residential Utility Unknown Total New Capacity Cumulative Capacity Number of Installations
Source(s): Sherwood, Larry. Interstate Renewable Energy Council. Personal Communication. July, 2008.
5.8.9
2007 Total Grid-Tied PV Capacity, by State Net Metering Utility (2006) Utility Residential Participants (2) Customers 19 24,160 5 1,789 4 185 2 213 5 1,088 17 380 5 454 4 184 9 375 180 2,495 232 31,323
PV Capacity (MW) State Total (1) Residential California 328.8 118.3 New Jersey 43.6 14.5 Arizona 18.9 3.2 Nevada 18.8 1.2 New York 15.4 9.7 Colorado 14.6 4.8 Massachusetts 4.6 1.5 Hawaii 4.5 1.3 Texas 3.2 1.6 All Other States 8.3 9.4 Total 475.0 164.4
Note(s):
Non-Res. 193.7 27.6 13.1 17.6 5.2 9.6 3.2 2.4 1.7 22.6 283.5
1) Projections totals may not add due to rounding. 2) Includes entities with participants in more than one state. 3) Arizona does not have state-wide net metering provisions.
Programs, 2006. July 2008. Table 4.2, p. 10.
Source(s): Sherwood, Larry. Interstate Renewable Energy Council (IREC). Personal Communication. July, 2008; EIA. Green Pricing and Net Metering
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September 2008
1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 Cumulative
Source(s): Sherwood, Larry. Interstate Renewable Energy Council. Personal Communication. July, 2008.
5-149
September 2008
2001 (1) 2002 (1) 2003 (1) 2004 2005 2006 2007
1) Estimates. 2) Turbines under 1 kW are often used on marine vehicles to charge batteries and to pump water for irrigation or ranching.
Source(s): American Wind Energy Association, Stimmel, Ron, 2008 AWEA Small Wind Turbine Global Market Study, June 2008.
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September 2008
Residential Apartments Households Commercial Colleges/Univ Food Sales/Services General Gov't Health Clinics Hospitals/Healthcare Hotels Justice/Public Order Mercantile Nursing Homes Office Public Assembly Schools K-12 Service Warehouses
16215.46 2114.382353 223.2 181.8181818 161.0952381 120 8616.666667 1041.2 197.7777778 198.3333333 180 240 3984.166667 1282.663636 240 186.6666667 3187.5 646.9642857 407.1428571 108 10304.4 1236.071429 521.4 58 4100 1495.764706 360 175.7522936 565 4698.7 1115.552941 325.625 160 11170 251.6989247 170.8333333 189 325.721393 200 119.6774194 3700 252.1666667 250 45 42500 1146.5
Source(s): Energy and Environmental Analysis Inc, The Combined Heat and Power Database, http://www.eea-inc.com/chpdata/index.html
5.10.2
Installed Combined Heat and Power Capacity, Principal Building Type and Prime Mover (MW) Combustion Reciprocating Turbine Engine Fuel Cell Microturbine 32.116 0.33 3.14 0.006 0.5
Residential Apartments Households Commercial Colleges/Univ Food Sales/Services Hospitals/Healthcare Hotels Justice/Public Order Mercantile Nursing Homes Office Public Assembly Schools K-12 Service Total
143.778 3.383 141.093 54.345 17.305 25.428 19.157 94.822 23.408 65.47 24.208 645.013
2 0.36 0.56 1.62 0.29 0.36 2.26 1.92 1.89 3.71 0.09 18.2
959.9 3.743 262.4 71.57 71.72 29.89 21.42 146.3 59.83 69.78 35.65 1768
Source(s): Energy and Environmental Analysis Inc, The Combined Heat and Power Database, http://www.eea-inc.com/chpdata/index.html
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September 2008
Residential Apartments Private Households Commercial Colleges/Univ Food Sales/Services Hospitals/Healthcare Hotels Justice/Public Order Mercantile Nursing Homes Office Public Assembly Schools K-12 Service Total
267.6 2.31 66.3 7.67 13.75 18.56 9.604 34.3 9.976 27.29 6.41 484.8
222.6 0.15 65.28 6.057 0 4.765 3.465 41.25 4.715 8.34 4.53 362.2
94.92 0.15 45.89 14.64 5.88 4.5 1.864 27.71 37.18 6.173 0.86 245.7
374.8 1.133 84.91 43.2 52.09 2.063 6.484 43.08 7.967 27.98 23.85 675.6
959.9 3.743 262.4 71.57 71.72 29.89 21.42 146.3 59.83 69.78 35.65 1768
Source(s): Energy and Environmental Analysis Inc, The Combined Heat and Power Database, http://www.eea-inc.com/chpdata/index.html
5.10.4
Installed Combined Heat and Power Capacity, Prime Mover and Census Region (MW)
Prime Mover Combustion Turbine Reciprocating Engine Fuel Cell Microturbine Total
South Midwest 198.7 134.5 160.7 109.3 1.735 0.81 1.05 1.07 362.2 245.7
Source(s): Energy and Environmental Analysis Inc, The Combined Heat and Power Database, http://www.eea-inc.com/chpdata/index.html
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September 2008
Residential 34.3% 34.1% 34.9% 36.9% 37.5% 36.3% 36.1% 36.2% 36.6%
| | | | | | | | | |
Total 60.9% 65.0% 68.7% 72.4% 73.3% 73.8% 75.1% 76.5% 77.9%
Industry 38.9% 34.9% 31.1% 27.4% 26.5% 26.1% 24.7% 23.3% 22.0%
Transportation 0.2% 0.2% 0.2% 0.2% 0.2% 0.2% 0.2% 0.2% 0.2%
Total 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100%
| | | | | | | | |
Delivered Total (10^15 Btu) 7.15 9.26 11.67 12.49 13.20 13.85 14.54 15.26 16.05
1) Buildings accounted for 80% (or $238 billion) of total U.S. electricity expenditures.
Table A2, p. 117-119 for 2006-2030 consumption, and Table A3, p. 120-121 expenditures.
Source(s): EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Consumption, Feb. 2008, Tables 8-12, p. 18-22 for 1980-2005; and EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008,
6.1.2
U.S. Electricity Generation Input Fuel Shares (Percent) Renewables Hydro. Oth(2) Total 11.8% 0.5% 12.3% 9.8% 2.2% 12.0% 7.3% 2.1% 9.4% 7.2% 2.2% 9.4% 7.0% 4.0% 10.9% 6.9% 4.8% 11.7% 6.6% 5.9% 12.5% 6.3% 6.3% 12.6% 6.0% 6.4% 12.5% Net Electric Imports (1) (1) (1) 0.2% 0.1% 0.1% 0.1% 0.1% 0.2%
Natural Gas 15.6% 10.9% 13.9% 16.2% 16.6% 15.6% 13.5% 11.5% 10.4%
Petroleum 10.8% 4.2% 3.0% 1.6% 1.3% 1.3% 1.3% 1.3% 1.3%
Coal 50.0% 53.0% 53.0% 51.6% 50.7% 51.4% 52.4% 54.1% 56.0%
Nuclear 11.3% 19.9% 20.6% 20.7% 20.0% 19.5% 20.0% 20.1% 19.4%
Total 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100%
1) Electric imports included in renewables. 2) Includes geothermal, municipal solid waste, biomass, solar thermal, solar PV, and wind.
p. 117-119 for 2006-2030 consumption and Table A17, p. 143-144 for renewables.
Source(s): EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Consumption, Feb. 2008, Tables 8-12, p. 18-22 for 1980-2005; and EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2,
Petroleum, 1.6%
Hydro., 7.2%
Coal, 51.6%
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September 2008
Natural Gas 3.80 3.33 5.32 6.42 6.89 6.75 6.09 5.45 5.13
Petroleum 2.63 1.29 1.14 0.64 0.56 0.57 0.59 0.61 0.63
Coal 12.16 16.26 20.22 20.48 21.01 22.18 23.67 25.51 27.55
Nuclear 2.74 6.10 7.86 8.21 8.31 8.41 9.05 9.50 9.57
Total 24.32 30.67 38.12 39.68 41.46 43.12 45.21 47.19 49.21
1) Electric imports included in renewables. 2) Includes geothermal, municipal solid waste, biomass, solar thermal, solar PV, and wind.
p. 117-119 for 2006-2030 consumption, and Table A17, p. 143-144 for renewables.
Source(s): EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Consumption, Feb. 2008, Tables 8-12, p. 18-22 for 1980-2000; and EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2,
6.1.4
U.S. Electricity Net Generation, by Plant Type (Billion kWh) Renewables Hydr(1) Oth(2) Total 276 6 282 290 35 324 271 45 316 285 61 347 289 131 421 297 168 465 298 220 518 298 242 540 299 255 553 Growth Rate 2006-year 1.4% 1.1% 1.0% 1.0% 1.0%
Natural Gas 346 265 399 608 695 682 614 543 503
Coal 1162 1560 1911 1930 2002 2122 2287 2502 2756
Nuclear 251 577 754 787 797 807 868 911 917
CHP (3) N.A. 61 165 173 160 160 145 136 133
Tot.(4) 2286 2901 3638 3899 4124 4287 4483 4685 4918
1) Electricity used for hydroelectric pumped storage is subtracted from this conventional hydroelectric generation. 2) Includes geothermal, municipal solid waste, wood, biomass, solar thermal, solar photovoltaic, and wind. 3) CHP = Combined heat and Power. Includes CHP plants whose primary business is to sell electricity and heat to the public. 4) Includes batteries, chemicals, hydrogen, pitch, purchased steam, sulfur, distributed generation, and other miscellaneous technologies that are not listed individually.
and EIA, Annual Energy Review 2002, Oct. 2003, Table 8.2b, p. 149 for 1980.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A8, p. 131-132; EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, July 2008, Table 8.2c, p. 230 for 1990-2000;
6.1.5
U.S. Electric Utility and Nonutility Net Summer Electricity Generation Capacity (GW) Coal Steam N.A. 302.3 310.2 305.2 311.4 319.3 338.5 367.6 401.5 Other Fossil N.A. N.A. N.A. 119.3 118.0 93.2 93.0 92.6 92.6 Combine Cycle N.A. N.A. N.A. 144.7 158.2 159.9 164.2 173.3 177.5 Combustion Turbine N.A. N.A. N.A. 128.06 134.55 127.08 129.20 140.92 161.81 Nuclear 51.8 99.6 97.9 100.2 100.9 102.1 110.9 115.7 114.9 Pumped 0.0 19.5 19.5 21.5 21.5 21.5 21.5 21.5 21.5 Total 495.9 628.4 693.3 819.0 844.5 823.1 857.2 911.6 969.8
1) Nuclear capacity includes 3 GW of uprates from 2005 to 2030. New nuclear plants are expected to come online 2013-2019.
and Table A17, p.142 for 2000; and EIA, AEO 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A9, p. 133-134 and Table A16, p. 142 for 2006-2030.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 1994, Jan. 1994, Table A9, p. 66 and Table A16, p. 73 for 1990; EIA, AEO 2003, Jan. 2003, Table A9, Table 133-134,
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September 2008
Wind N.A. 1.8 2.4 11.5 25.6 29.6 33.6 37.2 40.1
Total 82.7 81.4 88.8 96.3 111.6 117.3 123.6 128.3 132.5
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook (AEO) 1994, Jan. 1994, Table A9, p. 66 and Table A16, p. 73 for 1990; EIA, AEO 2003, Jan. 2003, Table A9, Table 133-134,
6.1.7
U.S. Electric Power Sector Cumulative Power Plant Additions Needed to Meet Future Electricity Demand (1) Number of New Power Plants to Meet Demand 2015 2020 2025 29 62 110 40 50 73 53 66 139 8 13 434 548 548 12 20 30 20 21 23 9 30 35 4 4 4 24 37 55 363 443 514 993 1,306 1,581
Typical New Electric Generator Plant Capacity (MW) Coal Steam 600 Combined Cycle 400 Combustion Turbine/Diesel 160 Nuclear Power (2) 1,000 Pumped Storage 143 (3) Fuel Cells 10 Conventional Hydropower 1 Geothermal 50 Municipal Solid Waste 30 Wood and Other Biomass 80 Solar Thermal 100 Solar Photovoltaic 5 Wind 50 Total Distributed Generation
Note(s):
160 (4)
1) Cumulative additions after Dec. 31, 2005. 2) Nuclear capacity includes 3 GW of uprates from 2004 to 2030. New nuclear plants are expected to come online 2013-2019. 3) Based on current stock average capacity. 4) Combustion turbine/diesel data used.
p. 77; and EIA, Electric Power Annual 2006, Sept. 2007, Table 2.2, p. 19 for pumped storage plant capacity and Table 2.6, p. 21 for hydroelectric plant capacity.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook (AEO) 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A9, p. 153-154 and Table A16, p. 162; EIA, Assumption to the AEO 2008, June 2008, Table 39,
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Buildings Energy Data Book: 6.2 Electricity Generation, Transmission, and Distribution
6.2.1 2006 Existing Capacity, by Energy Source (GW) Number of Generators 1,493 3,744 5,470 105 104 3,988 1,823 150 47 16,924 Generator Nameplate Capacity 336 64 443 3 106 77 26 20 1 1,076 Net Summer Capacity 313 58 388 2 100 78 24 21 1 986 Net Winter Capacity 315 63 417 2 102 77 24 21 1 1,022
September 2008
Plant Fuel Type Coal Petroleum Natural Gas Other Gases Nuclear Hydroelectric Conventional Other Renewables Pumped Storage Other Total
Source(s): EIA, Electric Power Annual 2006, Oct. 2007, Table 2.2, p. 24.
6.2.2
Net Internal Demand, Capacity Resources, and Capacity Margins in the Contiguous United States (GW) Net Internal Demand (1) 589.9 602.4 618.4 638.1 653.9 680.9 674.8 696.4 696.8 692.9 746.5 760.1 Capacity Resources (2) 727.5 730.4 737.9 744.7 765.7 808.1 789.0 833.4 856.1 875.9 882.1 906.2 Capacity Margin (3) 18.9% 17.5% 16.2% 14.3% 14.6% 15.7% 14.5% 16.4% 18.6% 20.9% 15.4% 16.1%
1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
Note(s):
1) Net internal demand represent the system demand that is planned for by the electric power industry`s reliability authority and is equal to internal demand less direct control load management and interruptible demand. Direct control load management: Customer demand that can be interrupted at the time of the seasonal peak by direct control of the system operator by interrupting power supply to individual appliances or equipment on customer premises. This type of control usually reduces the demand of residential customers. Interruptible demand: Customer demand that can be interrupted (through contractual agreement) during peak loads by direct control of the system operator or by the customer at direct request of the system operator. This type of control usually reduces the demand of large-volume commercial and industrial consumers. 2) Capacity Resources: Utility- and IPP-owned generating capacity that is existing or in various stages of planning or construction, less inoperable capacity, plus planned capacity purchases from other resources, less planned capacity sales. 3) Capacity Margin is the amount of unused available capability of an electric power system at peak load as a percentage of capacity resources.
Source(s): EIA, Electric Power Annual 2006, Oct. 2007, Table 3.2, p. 34.
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Buildings Energy Data Book: 6.2 Electricity Generation, Transmission, and Distribution
6.2.3 Electric Capacity Factors, by Year and Fuel Type Conventional Hydroelectric 45% 44% 39% 31% 37% 39% 39% 39% 42% 36%
September 2008
1990 1995 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007(1)
Note(s):
Source(s)
Coal 58% 62% 70% 68% 69% 71% 71% 73% 72% 73%
1) Preliminary.
Petroleum 17% 12% 19% 21% 17% 21% 22% 23% 12% 12%
Natural Gas 25% 27% 27% 25% 22% 18% 19% 20% 22% 24%
Nuclear 66% 77% 88% 89% 90% 88% 90% 89% 90% 91%
Solar/PV 13% 17% 15% 16% 16% 15% 17% 15% 14% 14%
Wind 18% 21% 27% 20% 27% 21% 25% 23% 27% 23%
Total 46% 47% 51% 50% 46% 46% 45% 46% 46% 46%
EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, 8.2a, p. 226, Table 8.11a, p. 260.
6.2.4
Electric Conversion Factors and Transmission and Distribution (T&D) Losses Average Utility Delivery Efficiency (1, 2) 29.3% 30.2% 30.5% 31.5% 31.8% 32.1% 32.2% 32.3% 32.6% Average Utility Delivery Ratio (Btu/kWh) (2, 3) 11,644 10,815 10,644 10,405 10,270 10,151 10,098 10,005 9,896 Growth Rate (2006-year) 0.3% 0.3% 0.2% 0.2% 0.2%
Transmission and Distribution (T&D) losses as a: Percent of Electric Generator Fuel Input Percent of Net Electricity Generated (4)
Note(s):
3.2% 9.5%
1) Use these values to convert primary energy of electric generator fuel input to delivered energy. 2) Accounts for fuel conversion losses, plant use of electricity, and T&D losses. 3) Use these values to convert delivered electric energy to primary energy. 4) After fuel conversion losses and plant use of electricity.
Annual Energy Review 2006, July 2007, Diagram 5, p. 223 for T&D losses; EIA, 2005 State Energy Data Report, Tables 8-12 for Electricity Consumption and Generator Fuel Consumption.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119 for generator consumption and Table A8, p. 131-132 for electricity sales; EIA,
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Buildings Energy Data Book: 6.2 Electricity Generation, Transmission, and Distribution
6.2.5 2006 Impacts of Saving an Electric Quad (1) Utility Fuel Input Shares (%) 16% 2% 52% 21% 9% 100% Average-Sized Utility Unit (MW) in 2006 81 17 225 1,015 21 Aggregate Number of Units to Provide the Fuel's Share of the Electric Quad (2) 138 94 38 3 154 427
September 2008
Plant Fuel Type Natural Gas Petroleum Coal Nuclear Renewable (3) Total
Note(s):
1) This table displays the breakdown of electric power plants that could be eliminated by saving an electric quad, in exact proportion to the actual primary fuel shares for electricity produced nationwide in 2006. Use this table to estimate the avoided capacity implied by saving one electric quad. 2) Based on typical U.S. power plants operating less than full load throughout the year. 3) Includes pumped storage.
for consumption and Table A8, p. 131-132 for electricity supply.
Source(s): EIA, Electric Power Annual 2006, Oct. 2007, Table 2.2, p. 24; and EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119
6.2.6
Cost of an Electric Quad Used in the Buildings Sector ($2006 Billion) Residential 9.92 9.89 8.59 9.90 10.30 9.95 10.01 10.11 10.30 Commercial 10.14 9.13 7.65 9.00 9.15 8.45 8.50 8.57 8.80 Buildings Sector 10.02 9.53 8.13 9.46 9.74 9.19 9.23 9.30 9.51
This table provides the consumer cost of an electric quad. Use this table to estimate the savings to consumers when a primary quad is saved in the form of delivered electricity.
Tables 8-12, p. 18-22 for 1980-2005; EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Prices and Expenditures, Feb. 2008, Tables 2-3, p. 24-25 for 1980-2005 and prices; and EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, July 2008, Appendix D, Gross Domestic Product and Implicit Price Deflators, p. 377.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119 and Table A3, p. 120-121; EIA, State Energy Data 2005: Consumption, February 2008,
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Buildings Energy Data Book: 6.2 Electricity Generation, Transmission, and Distribution
6.2.7 Characteristics of New and Stock Generating Capacities, by Plant Type 2006 Heat Rate (Btu/kWh) 9,200 8,765 7,196 6,752 10,833 9,289 7,930 10,022 10,400 2015 Heat Rate (Btu/kWh) 9,069 8,389 7,064 6,612 10,675 9,012 6,960 10,280 10,400
September 2008
New Plant Type Pulverized Coal Coal-Gasification Comb. Cycle Combined Cycle Advanced Combined-Cycle Combustion Turbine Advanced Combustion Turbine Fuel Cell Wind Advanced Nuclear
2006 Installed Capital Costs of a Typical Power Plant Price Size Cost ($2006 thousand per MW) (MW) ($2006 million) 1,534 600 920 1,773 550 975 703 250 176 706 400 282 500 160 80 473 230 109 5,374 10 54 1,434 50 72 2,475 1,350 3,341
Stock Plant Type Fossil Fuel Steam Heat Rate (Btu/kWh) Nuclear Energy Heat Rate (Btu/kWh)
Note(s):
This table provides comparisons of electric generating plants. Plant use of electricity is included; however, transmission and distribution losses of the electric grid are excluded.
June 2008, Table 48, p. 89 for fossil fuel heat rates, Table 39, p. 77 for other generator data.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 117-119, and Table A8, p. 131-132. EIA, Assumptions to the AEO 2008,
6.2.8
Characteristics of New Commercial Distributed Generating Technologies, by Plant Type Efficiency (HHV) Electrical Electrical + Thermal 0.16 N.A. 0.36 0.72 0.32 0.77 0.31 0.82 0.23 0.66 0.30 0.63 2006 Installed Capital Costs of Typical DG Technologies Price Size Cost ($2006 per kW) (kW) ($2006 thousand) 6,547 25 164 5,674 200 1,135 1,233 200 247 1,353 200 271 1,974 1000 1,974 1,768 200 354 Service Life (years) 30 20 20 20 20 20
New Plant Type Solar Photovoltaic Fuel Cell Natural Gas Engine Oil-Fired Engine Natural Gas Turbine Natural Gas Microturbine
Source(s): Discovery Insights, Final Report: Commercial and Industrial CHP Technology Cost and Performance Data Analysis for EIA's NEMS, Jan. 2006, Table 7, p. 12; and EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, July 2008, Appendix D, p. 373.
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Buildings Energy Data Book: 6.2 Electricity Generation, Transmission, and Distribution
6.2.9 NERC Regions Map
September 2008
Source(s): EIA, Form EIA-411, Cordinated Bulk Power Supply Program Report, Feb. 2007
6.2.10
Peak Hour Demand and Capacity Margin, Summer and Winter by NERC Region (MW) Summer 2006 (1) Peak Hour Demand 62,339 45,751 47,892 63,241 28,130 35,111 191,920 198,831 41,976 27,620 19,313 47,535 62,608 42,556 142,096 30,111 62,324 38,753 10,908 776,193 Capacity Margin (3) 12% 10% 4% 13% 10% 16% 11% 11% 8% 17% 12% 15% 7% 12% 11% 14% 9% 27% 12% 13% Winter 2005/2006 (2) Peak Hour Demand 47,948 43,413 39,045 46,828 21,768 25,060 153,600 158,984 34,640 21,442 14,511 38,466 50,804 31,764 107,493 17,130 40,537 40,298 9,528 609,564 Capacity Margin (3) 21% 19% 16% 38% 34% 42% 33% 30% 27% 42% 43% 31% 29% 33% 29% 47% 25% 29% 24% 31%
Region Sub-region ERCOT FRCC MRO NPCC NPCC New England NPCC New York RFC SERC SERC Central SERC Delta SERC Gateway SERC Southeastern SERC VACAR SPP WECC WECC AZ-NM-SNV WECC CA-MX US WECC NWPP WECC RMPA U.S. TOTAL
Month August August July August August August August August August August July August August July July July July July July July
Month December February February December December December December February February December December February February December December December December December December December
Note(s):
1) Summer Demand includes the months of June, July, August, and September. 2) Winter Demand includes December of the previous year and January-March of the current year. 3) Capacity Margin is the amount of unused available capability of an electric power system at peak load as a percentage of net capacity resources. Net Capacity Resources: Utility- and IPP-owned generating capacity that is existing or in various stages of planning or construction, less inoperable capacity, plus planned capacity purchases from other resources, less planned capacity sales.
and Energy 1997-2007.
Source(s): NERC, Electricity Supply and Demand Database 2007, Novemeber 2007, Tables used: Capacity and Demand 1990-2007 and Monthly Demand
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Buildings Energy Data Book: 6.3 Natural Gas Production and Distribution
6.3.1 Natural Gas Overview (Trillion Cubic Feet) Supplemental Gas 0.16 0.12 0.09 0.06 0.06 0.06 0.06 0.06 0.06 Net Import 0.94 1.45 3.54 3.46 3.85 4.03 3.55 3.28 3.18 Storage Withdrawal 0.02 -0.51 0.83 -0.74 0.09 0.09 0.09 0.09 0.09 Balancing Item (1) -0.64 0.31 -0.31 0.37 -0.05 -0.05 -0.05 -0.04 -0.05
September 2008
Production 19.40 17.81 19.18 18.51 19.29 19.52 19.67 19.60 19.43
Consumption (2) 19.88 19.17 23.33 21.66 23.25 23.66 23.33 22.99 22.72
1) Net internal demand represent the system demand that is planned for by the electric power industry`s reliability authority and is equal to
p. 139 for 2006-2030.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Table 6.1, p. 181 for 1980-2000; and EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A13,
6.3.2
Natural Gas in Underground Storage (Billion Cubic Feet) Underground Storage Capacity 7434 85% 7794 89% 8241 74% 8415 86% 8207 82% 8206 84% 8255 84% 8268 83% 8330 87% 8368 85%
1980 1990 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007
Base Gas 3642 3868 4352 4301 4340 4303 4201 4200 4211 4234
Working Gas 2655 3068 1719 2904 2375 2563 2696 2635 3070 2879
Total 6297 6936 6071 7204 6715 6866 6897 6835 7281 7113
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Table 6.6, p. 193.
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Buildings Energy Data Book: 6.3 Natural Gas Production and Distribution
6.3.3 Natural Gas Well Productivity Gross Withdrawals from Wells (billion cubic feet) 17,573 16,054 17,726 18,129 17,795 17,882 17,885 17,472 17,942 18,437
September 2008
1980 1990 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007
Producing Wells 182 269 276 373 388 393 406 426 449 427
Average Productivity (thousand cubic feet per day) 263.8 163.4 158.8 133.1 125.7 124.6 120.3 112.4 109.6 118.3
6.3.4
Natural Gas End-Use Deliveries by Type of Distributor for 1996, 2000, and 2006 2000 Volume Delivered (Tcf) (Percent) 14.2 67% 13.2 0.8 0.2 0.0 2.5 12% 4.3 20% 0.2 1% 21.2 100% 2006 Volume Delivered (Tcf) (Percent) 11.1 56% 0.8 0.2 0.0 12.0 3.5 17% 4.3 21% 0.2 1% 19.9 100%
1996 Volume Delivered Type of Distributor (Tcf) (Percent) Local Distribution Comp. 14.3 72% Investor-Owned 13.3 Municipal 0.8 Privately-Owned 0.2 Cooperative 0.0 Interstate Pipeline 1.6 8% Intrastate Pipeline 3.8 19% Other 0.3 1% Total 20.0 100%
Customers (millions) 58.7 54.0 4.0 0.7 0.1 0.0 1.4 0.0 60.2
Customers (millions) 57.8 4.3 0.5 0.1 62.8 0.0 1.4 0.0 64.2
Customers (millions) 61.4 4.9 0.8 0.1 67.2 0.0 2.7 0.0 69.9
Source(s): EIA, Distribution of Natural Gas: The Final Step in the Transmission Process, June 2008, Table 1, p. 6.
6.3.5
Natural Gas Consumption, by Sector (Trillion Cubic Feet) Residential 4.75 4.39 5.00 4.37 4.81 5.01 5.15 5.19 5.17 Commercial 2.61 2.62 3.18 2.83 2.96 3.20 3.37 3.53 3.67 Industrial 8.20 8.26 9.29 7.62 8.13 8.19 8.15 8.20 8.11 Transportation 0.64 0.66 0.66 0.60 0.66 0.69 0.74 0.78 0.78 Electric Power 3.68 3.25 5.21 6.24 6.70 6.56 5.92 5.30 4.99 Total 19.88 19.17 23.33 21.66 23.25 23.66 23.33 22.99 22.72
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Review 2007, June 2008, Table 6.5, p. 191 for 1980-2000; and EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A13, p. 139 for 2006-2030.
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Buildings Energy Data Book: 6.4 Electric and Generic Quad Carbon Emissions
6.4.1 1990 1995 2000 2006 2010 2015 2020 2025 2030 Emissions of Carbon Dioxide from Electric Utilities (Million Metric Tons) 1980 1955 2301 2344 2413 2519 2627 2771 2948
September 2008
Source(s): EIA, Emissions of Green House Gases in the United States 2006, p. 16, November 2007; EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A18, p. 145.
6.4.2
Electric Quad Average Carbon Dioxide Emissions with Average Utility Fuel Mix (Million Metric Tons) (1) Petroleum 1.38 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 Natural Gas 8.57 0.75 0.81 0.72 0.63 0.54 0.58 0.25 0.24 0.43 0.55 0.44 0.18 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 Coal 48.91 0.59 0.35 0.86 1.32 2.25 2.80 3.13 3.62 3.88 4.24 4.86 5.69 6.32 6.85 7.61 8.21 8.94 9.68 10.29 10.88 11.55 12.19 12.87 13.78 Nuclear 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 Renewable 0.30 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.01 Total 59.16 1.34 1.17 1.58 1.95 2.79 3.38 3.38 3.86 4.31 4.80 5.31 5.87 6.32 6.85 7.61 8.22 8.94 9.69 10.30 10.88 11.55 12.20 12.88 13.79
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030
Note(s):
1) This table provides estimates of the carbon emissions resulting from consumption of a primary quad at electric utilities. Projected (2007-2030) new marginal capacity emissions will result from natural gas- and coal-fired power plants. Electric generation capacity is projected to increase for biomass, wind, and nuclear power. Biomass and wind power electric generation will increase 2007-2010. Nuclear electric generation capacity will increase 2016-2019. Electricity imports from utility consumption were ignored since this energy was produced outside of the U.S. "Average" means the weighted average of different fuels (e.g., petroleum is the average of residual and distillate fuel oils). The combustion of fossil fuels produces carbon in the form of carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide; however, carbon monoxide emissions oxidize in a relatively short time to form carbon dioxide. 2) Emissions from renewable energy include emissions released from geothermal power and non-biogenic emissions from municipal solid waste.
Source(s): EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 2008, Mar. 2008, Table A2, p. 137-139 and Table A18, p. 164.
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Buildings Energy Data Book: 6.5 Public Benefit Funds/System Benefit Funds
6.5.1 Funding for States with Active Public Benefit Effeciencies Programs as of 2003 (Nominal Dollars) Reporting Year 2002 2003 2002 2003 2002 2003 2002 2002 2002-2003 2002 2002 2003 2002 2002 2002 2002 2002 FY2003 Program Budget 2.0 240.0 87.1 2.0 138.0 2.9 7.8 14.3 5.2 99.6 129.0 11.2 14.3 19.1 16.4 69.0 16.8 49.7 924.4 Percent of Utility Revenues 0.1% 1.5% 3.1% 0.0% 3.0% 0.3% 0.1% 2.0% 0.5% 1.5% 1.3% 0.5% 0.1% 0.9% 2.7% 0.4% 3.3% 1.4%
September 2008
Arizona California Connecticut Illinois Massachusetts Maine Michigan Montana New Hampshire(1) New Jersey New York Nevada Ohio Oregon(2) Rhode Island Texas Vermont Wisconsin Total
Note(s):
1) Due to a start-up date of June 1, 2002 and counted til March 2003; remainder of year estimated 2) Partial year; program began March 1, 2002
Energy Effciency Policies, April 2004, Table 3, p. 27
Source(s): American Council for an Energy Efficient Economy, Kushle, York, Wittie, Five Years In: An Examination of the First Half Decade of Public Benefit
6.5.2
Demand-Side Management Funds Collected for Energy Effciency Programs in 2000 ($2006) (1) Total Expenditures ($ million) 77.4 115.6 16.3 129.6 7.3 14.7 57.3 12.8 189.7 334.0 1,276 Per Capita Spendings ($/person) 22.69 18.18 15.53 15.38 12.00 11.50 10.67 10.57 9.99 9.82 4.52
Connecticut Massachusetts Rhode Island New Jersey Vermont Maine Wisconsin Hawaii New York California National(2)
Note(s):
1) This table shows demand side management funds(including Public Benefit Funds) collected in 2000 that were spent of energy efficiency programs. 2) The top ten states in spending per capita represent 74.8% of total U.S. funds collected for energy effciency programs.
Energy Effciency Policies, April 2004, Table 3, p. 27
Source(s): American Council for an Energy Efficient Economy, Kushle, York, Wittie, Five Years In: An Examination of the First Half Decade of Public Benefit
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September 2008
Minimum Efficiency Standards and Maximum Energy Use for Typical Single-Family Residential Heating and Cooling Equipment Maximum Energy Use for Space Heating (2) 1992 2006 New Existing New Existing North South North South North South North South 1170 445 1489 771 1170 445 1489 771 731 N.A. 930 422 731 N.A. 930 422 12923 4685 11232 5546 11412 4137 9919 4898
Heating Equipment Natural Gas, Furnace Oil, Boiler Electric, Heat Pump
Minimum Efficiency (1) 1992 2006 78 AFUE 78 AFUE 80 AFUE 80 AFUE 6.8 HSPF 7.7 HSPF
Maximum Electricity Use for Space Cooling 1992 2006 New Existing New Existing North South North South North South North South 1113 2543 1000 3743 927 2119 833 3119 1100 2414 813 2657 846 1857 625 2044
1) AFUE = Annual Fuel Utilization Efficiency. HSPF = Heating Season Performance Factor. 2) Gas use is in therms. Oil use is in gallons. Electricity use is in kWh. 3) SEER = Seasonal Energy Efficiency Ratio.
Sector, Sept. 1997, Table 3.20, p. 52-53 and Table 3.21, p. 58; and Federal Register, Energy Conservation Program for Consumer Products: Central Air Conditioners and Heat Pumps Energy Conservation Standards, Vol. 66, No. 14, Jan. 22, 2001, p. 7170 for central air conditioner and heat pump.
Source(s): DOC/GPO, Title 10, Chapter 2, Part 430, Section 430.32, Jan 1, 2001, p. 259 for efficiencies; LBNL, Energy Data Sourcebook for the U.S. Residential
7.1.2
Federal Minimum Efficiency Standard for Commercial Cooling Equipment from the Energy Policy Act of 2005 (1) 65 - 134 kBtu/h 11.2 11.0 135 - 239 kBtu/h 11.0 10.8 240 - 759 kBtu/h 10.0 9.8
Type Central Air Conditioner (EER) without heating or electrical resistance heating without heating equipment Central Air Heat Pump (EER) -- Cooling without heating or electrical resistance heating without heating equipment Central Air Heat Pump (COP) -- Heating
Note(s):
Source(s): U. S. Government, Energy Policy Act of 2005, August 2005, Section 136, Paragraphs 7-9.
7.1.3
HVAC Tax Incentives of the Energy Policy Act of 2005 Qualifying Efficiency 15 SEER and 12.5 EER 15 SEER, 9 HSPF, and 13 EER 14.1 EER and 3.3 COP 16.2 EER and 3.6 COP 15.0 EER and 3.5 COP 95% AFUE Electricity use <2% of total furnace site energy consumption 2.0 EF 0.80 EF Credit 300 300 300 300 300 150 50 300 300
Equipment Type Central air conditioner Central air-source heat pump Ground-source heat pump Closed loop Open loop Direct expansion (DX) Gas, oil, or propane furnace or boiler Furnace Blower Electric heat pump water heater Gas, oil, or propane water heater
Source(s): ACEEE, The Federal Energy Policy Act of 2005 and its Implications for Energy Efficiency Program Efforts, Sept. 2005, Table 1, p. 6.
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September 2008
U.S. Clean Air Act Reduction % By 75% 1994 100% 1996 100% 1994
Bromofluorocarbons (Halons)
1992
Hydrochlorofluorocarbons (HCFCs)
1996
Hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs)
Note(s):
N.A.
N.A.
1) The phase out of halocarbons is consistent with Title VI of the Clean Air Act and is in accordance with the Montreal Protocol and Amendments. 2) The amount of gas produced and consumed in this year is established and defined as the base level. To meet basic domestic needs, levels of production are allowed to exceed the base level by up to 10%. 3) After this year, levels of production are no longer permitted to exceed the base year level. 4) With possible essential use exemptions.
Ozone Secretariat, 2005, http://www.unep.ch/ozone/index.shtml; and Title VI, The Clean Air Act of 1990, S.1630, 101st Congress., 2nd Session.
Source(s): Federal Register, Vol. 72, No. 123, June 2007, p. 35230, http://www.epa.gov/ozone/title6/phaseout; United Nations Ozone Environmental Programme,
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Buildings Energy Data Book: 7.2 National Legislation on Appliances & Lighting
7.2.1 Minimum Efficiency Standards for Appliances and Equipment Adjusted Volume (2) (Cu. Ft.) 21 25 25 18 29 Adjusted Volume (2) (Cu. Ft.) 25.7 30.0 24.8 Rated Maximum Electricity Use (kWh) 1990 1993 2001 955 685 478 1,183 1,183 1,015 1,428 797 781 711 992 631 574 542 694
September 2008
Refrigerator-Freezers (Auto Defrost) (1) Top freezer w/o through-the-door ice service and all-refrigeratorsauto defrost Side freezer w/o through-the-door ice service Bottom freezer w/o through-the-door ice service Top freezer w/ through-the-door ice service Side freezer w/ through-the-door ice service
Freezers (1) Upright Freezers w/ Manual Defrost Upright Freezers w/ Automatic Defrost Chest Freezers and all other Freezers except Compact Freezers
Rated Maximum Electricity Use (kWh) 1993 2001 529 452 838 699 433 389
Room Air-Conditioners (3) Less than 6,000 Btu/h 6,000 to 7,999 Btu/h 8,000 to 13,999 Btu/h 14,000 to 19,999 Btu/h 20,000 Btu/h or more
Minimum EER 9.7 9.7 9.8 9.7 8.5 Minimum EF (lbs./kWh) 3.01 2.67 Minimum EF (cu. Ft./kWh per cycle) 1994 1.18 N.A. Minimum EF (cycles/kWh) 0.46
Typical Maximum Electricity Use (kWh) (4) 464 541 842 1,314 1,765 Typical Maximum Energy Use 835 kWh 32 therms Minimum Modified EF (cu. Ft./kWh per cycle) 2004 2007 1.04 1.26 1.04 1.26 Typical Maximum Electricity Use (kWh) 498
Minimum EF (7) 1990 1991 2004 0.54 0.54 0.59 0.51 0.51 0.51 0.90 0.88 0.92
Typical Maximum Energy Use 1990 1991 2004 208 therms 208 therms 191 therms 155 gallons 155 gallons 155 gallons 3456 kWh 3534 kWh 3380 kWh
1) DOE regulations mandate maximum electrical consumption for appliance based on its size. 2) AV = Adjusted Volume = Refrigerator Compartment + 1.63 * Freezer Compartment. 3) DOE regulations mandate minimum efficiency for appliance. 4) Electric use based on 750 hours of operation. 5) Includes electricity for water heater and clothes dryer. 6) DOE regulations mandate minimum efficiency for appliance based on its size. 7) Based on a 40-gallon tank.
Appliance Industry Factbook, Nov. 2000, Table 21, p. 28, for refrigerator and freezer sizes; DOE/EE, Final Rule Technical Support Document: Energy Efficiency Standards for Consumer Products: Clothes Washers, Dec. 2000, p. 10-8; LBNL, Energy Data Sourcebook for U.S. Residential Sector, May 1997, p. 102-103 for clothes dryers, p. 94 for dishwashers; DOE/EE, Technical Support Document: Energy Efficiency Standards for Consumer Products: Water Heaters, Apr. 2000, p. 9-14.
Source(s): DOC/GPO, 2001 CFR, Title 10, Chapter 2, Part 430, Section 430.32, Jan. 1, 2001, p. 258-264 for minimum efficiencies; AHAM, 2000 Major Home
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Buildings Energy Data Book: 7.2 National Legislation on Appliances & Lighting
7.2.2
September 2008
Energy Independence and Security Act 2007, Lighting Standards for General Service Incandescent Lamps
General Service Incandescent Effective Date Maximum Wattage 2012 72 2013 53 2014 43 2015 29
Minimum Life 1000 hrs. 1000 hrs. 1000 hrs. 1000 hrs.
Modified Spectrum General Service Incandescent Effective Date Maximum Wattage Rated Lumen Range 2012 72 1,118-1,950 2013 53 788-1,117 2014 43 563-787 2015 29 232-563
Minimum Life 1000 hrs. 1000 hrs. 1000 hrs. 1000 hrs.
By 2020, the minimum efficacy for general service incandescent will be 45 lm/W unless the Secretary of Energy has implemented another standard which saves as much or more energy than a 45 lm/W standard.
Source(s): U. S. Government, Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007, January 2007, Section 321.
7.2.3
Federal Minimum Efficiency Standard for Commercial Refrigeration Equipment from the Energy Policy Act of 2005 (1) Consumption Maximum (kWh/day) (2) 0.10 V + 2.04 0.12 V + 3.34 0.40 V + 1.38 0.75 V + 4.10 0.27 AV - 0.71, or 0.70
Type of Equipment Refrigerator with Solid Doors Refrigerator with Transparent Doors Freezers with Solid Doors Freezers with Transparent Doors Refrigerators/Freezers with Solid Doors (3)
Note(s):
1) The effective date of these manufacturing standards is January 1, 2010. 2) V = volume in cubic feet. 3) AV = Adjusted Volume in cubic feet. Standard is the greater of the two numbers.
Source(s): U. S. Government, Energy Policy Act of 2005, August 2005, Section 136, Paragraphs 7-9
7.2.4
Federal Minimum Efficiency Standards from the Energy Policy Act of 2005 Effective Data Jan. 2007 Oct. 2007 Jan. 2006 Jan. 2006 Standard Packaged with ENERGY STAR v2 screw-in CFLs ENERGY STAR v1 criteria ENERGY STAR v2 criteria 190 Watt maximum
Residential Ceiling Fan Light Kits Dehumidifiers CFLs Torchiere Lighting Fixtures Commercial Clothes Washers Distribution Transformer Exit Signs Fluorescent Lamp Ballasts (F34 and F96ES) Ice-Makers (Cube type, 50-2,500 lbs/day) Mercury Vapor Lamp Ballasts Pre-Rinse Spray Valves Unit Heaters
Jan. 2007 Jan. 2007 Jan. 2006 Jan. 2009 Jan. 2010 Jan. 2008 Jan. 2006 Aug. 2008
MEF at least 1.26 and WF no more than 9.5 (1) Meet NEMA TP-1-2002 ENERGY STAR v2 criteria Closes loophole in DOE regulations so that these ballasts will be electronic, like other covered ballasts. CEC Standard (2) Bans sale of mercury vapor lamp ballasts Maximum 1.6 gallon/minute Equipped with an intermittent ignition device and have power venting or an automatic flue damper
Note(s):
Source(s): ACEEE, The Federal Energy Policy Act of 2005 and its Implications for Energy Efficiency Program Efforts, Sept. 2005, Table 2, p. 10.
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Buildings Energy Data Book: 7.2 National Legislation on Appliances & Lighting
7.2.5 Tax Incentive of the Energy Policy Act of 2005
September 2008
Appliance Manufacturers -- Refrigerator manufactures receive a $75 credit for each unit sold that uses 15-19.9% less energy than required by the 2001 Federal minimum efficiency; $125 for 20-24.9% less; and $175 for at least 25% less. -- Clothes washer manufacturers receive a $100 credit for each unit sold that meeting the 2007 ENERGY STAR criteria. -- Dishwasher manufacturers receive a $3 credit per percentage of energy savings greater than the current ENERGY STAR criteria for each unit sold. For example, a dishwasher is 15% more efficient than the current ENERGY STAR criteria, the credit is $3 X 15 = $45. -- Credits are only available for products manufactured in the U.S. -- Each manufacturer is capped at $75 million for available credits. Stationary Fuel Cells and Microturbines -- Tax credit of 30%, up to $1000 per kW for fuel cells that at 500 kW or greater and have an efficiency of at least 30%. Residential applications do not have a capacity or efficiency requirement. Units must be put in place between January 1, 2006 and December 31, 2007. -- Tax credit of 10%, up to $200 per kW for microturbines that are less than 2,000 kW and have an efficiency of at least 26%. Units must be put in place between January 1, 2006 and December 31, 2007.
Source(s): ACEEE, The Federal Energy Policy Act of 2005 and its Implications for Energy Efficiency Program Efforts, Sept. 2005, p. 1-7.
7.2.6
Daylight Savings Time from the Energy Policy Act of 2005 (1)
-- Daylight saving time starts second Sunday of March and now begins 3 weeks earlier in the spring. -- Daylight saving time ends the first Sunday of November, one week later in the fall. -- New schedule starts in 2007. The last time daylight saving time schedule was last adjusted in 1986. -- Congress retains the right to revert the daylight saving time back to the 2005 time schedule. -- Secretary of Energy to report to Congress the impact of extending daylight saving time.
Source(s): U.S. Government, Energy Policy Act of 2005, August 2005, Section 110.
7.2.7
-- DOE is to: (1) detail energy conservation and labeling requirements for specified commercial and industrial equipment (including lamps and plumbing products); and (2) delineate standards for heating and air-conditioning equipment, electric motors, high intensity discharge lamps, and distribution transformers. -- DOE is to provide financial and technical assistance to support a voluntary national testing and information program for widely used commercial office equipment and luminaries with potential for significant energy savings. -- Requires DOE to report to the Congress on: (1) the potential for the development and commercialization of appliances which are substantially more efficient than required by Federal or State law; and (2) the energy savings and environmental benefits of early appliance replacement programs.
Source(s): U.S. Government, Energy Policy Act of 1992 Conference Report, Oct. 1992.
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Buildings Energy Data Book: 7.3 National Legislation on Building Energy Codes
7.3.1 Status of State Energy Codes: Residential Sector (1)
September 2008
Note(s): 1) These are the current residential codes as of February 2009. Source(s): The Department of Energy, Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, The Status of State Energy Codes, www.energycodes.gov/implement/state_codes/;
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Buildings Energy Data Book: 7.3 National Legislation on Building Energy Codes
7.3.2 Status of State Energy Codes: Commercial Sector (1)
September 2008
Note(s): 1) These are the current Commercial codes as of January 2009. Source(s): The Department of Energy, Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, The Status of State Energy Codes, www.energycodes.gov/implement/state_codes/;
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Buildings Energy Data Book: 7.3 National Legislation on Building Energy Codes
7.3.3 Energy Independence and Security Act 2007, High Performance Commercial Buildings
September 2008
- Create the Office of Commercial High Performance Green Buildings - The Office of Commercial High Performance Green Buildings with The Office of Federal High Performance Green Buildings will establish a High Performance Green Buildings Clearinghouse to disseminate research through outreach, education, and technical assistance - Zero Net Energy Initiative for Commercial Buildings was also included establishing specific goals Net zero energy use in all new commercial buildings constructed by 2030 Net zero energy use in 50% of the United State commercial building stock by 2040 Net zero energy use in the entire United States commercial building stock by 2050
Source(s): The 110th Congress of the United States, The Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007, January 2007, Section 422.
7.3.4
New Homes -- Builders who build homes that use 50% less energy for space heating and cooling than the IECC 2003 are eligible for a $2,000 tax credit per home. -- Manufactured housing builder that either uses 30% less energy than this reference code or that meet the then-current ENERGY STAR criteria are eligible for $1,000 tax credit per home. At least 10% of energy savings must be obtained through building envelope improvements. Envelope Improvements to Existing Homes -- 10% tax credit up to $500 for upgrading building envelope to be compliant with codes for new construction. Window replacement is capped at $200. $500 is the cap for all for envelope and HVAC improvements. Improvements must be installed between January 1, 2006 and December 31, 2007. Commercial Buildings -- Tax deduction up to $1.80/SF for new commercial buildings which are 50% more efficient than the requirements of ASHRAE 90.1-19XX. -- Tax deduction up to $0.60/SF for existing commercial buildings which upgrade the envelope, lighting, or HVAC building systems to 50% more efficient than ASHRAE 90.1-19XX.. The deduction can be combined when improvements are made to two building components. -- Deductions apply to new buildings placed in service and improvements to existing buildings completed between August X, 2005 and December 31, 2007.
Source(s): ACEEE, The Federal Energy Policy Act of 2005 and its Implications for Energy Efficiency Program Efforts, Sept. 2005, p. 1-7.
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Buildings Energy Data Book: 7.3 National Legislation on Building Energy Codes
7.3.5 Energy Policy Act of 1992, Building Energy Codes
September 2008
-- Each State must certify to the Secretary of Energy whether its energy efficiency standards with respect to residential and commercial building codes meet or exceed those of the Council of American Building Officials (CABO) Model Energy Code, 1992, and of the American Society of Heating, Refrigerating, and Air-Conditioning Engineers, respectively. -- Requires DOE to provide technical assistance and incentive funding to the States to promote increased use of energy efficiency codes for buildings. -- Directs the Secretary to: (1) establish standards that require energy efficiency measures that are technologically feasible and economically justified in new Federal buildings; and (2) review them every five years. Mandates Federal agency compliance with such standards. -- Prescribes guidelines under which DOE shall support the upgrading of voluntary building energy codes for new residential and commercial buildings. -- The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and Agriculture are to jointly establish energy efficiency standards for residential housing. Amends Federal law regarding veterans' readjustment benefits to condition a loan for new residential housing upon compliance with such standards. -- DOE is to: (1) issue voluntary building energy code guidelines for use by the private and public sectors to encourage the assignment of energy efficiency ratings for new residential buildings; (2) establish a technical assistance program for State and local organizations to encourage the use of residential energy efficiency rating systems consistent with such guidelines; (3) provide matching grants for the establishment of regional building energy efficiency centers in each of the regions served by a DOE regional support office; and (4) establish an advisory task force to evaluate grant activities. -- HUD is to: (1) assess the energy performance of manufactured housing and make recommendations to the National Commission on Manufactured Housing regarding thermal insulation and energy efficiency improvements; and (2) test the performance and determine the cost effectiveness of manufactured housing constructed in compliance with certain statutory standards. Authorizes the States to establish thermal insulation and energy efficiency standards for manufactured housing if the Secretary of HUD has not issued final regulations by October 1993. -- HUD is to promulgate a uniform affordable housing plan using energy efficient mortgages (mortgages that provide financing incentives either for the purchase of energy efficient homes, or for incorporating the cost of such improvements into the mortgage). -- DOE is to provide financial assistance to support a voluntary national window rating program that will develop energy ratings and labels for windows and window systems. Requires the National Fenestration Rating Council to develop such rating program according to specified procedures. Requires the Secretary to develop specified alternative rating systems if a national voluntary window rating program consistent with this Act has not been developed.
Source(s): U.S. Government, Energy Policy Act of 1992 Conference Report, Oct. 1992.
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October 2009
8-174
October 2009
1) Includes water from the public supply and self-supplied sources (e.g. wells). 2) In some cases USGS did not split water use by sector and source in the 2000 estimates. 2000 figures were estimated using 1995 percentage splits of water use by sector applied to the revised 2000 estimates of total use.
Circular 1004; U.S. Geological Survey. Estimated Use of Water in the United States in 1990. 1993. Tables 11, 13. Solley, W.B., et. al. U.S. Geological Survey Circular 1081; U.S. Geological Survey. Estimated Use of Water in the United States in 1995. 1998. Tables 11, 13. p. 25, 29. Solley, W.B., et. al. U.S. Geological Survey Circular 1200; U.S. Geological Survey. Estimated Use of Water in the United States in 2000. 2004. Table 6. p. 17. Hutson, S.S., et.al. U.S. Geological Survey Circular 1268.
Source(s): U.S. Geological Survey. Estimated Use of Water in the United States in 1985. 1988. Tables 3, 5. p. 25, 29. Solley, W.B., et. al. U.S. Geological Survey
8.1.2
Average Energy Intesity of Public Water Supplies by Location (kWh per Million Gallons) Sourcing 836 2,230 2,117 2,117 9,727 9,727 2390 1,500 Treatment (1) 627 65 111 111 (5) 111 111 (6) (6) Distribution 437 (6) 1,272 1,272 1,272 1,272 380 (6) Wastewater 1,363 1,649 1,911 0 1,911 0 1,570 1,750 not included not included not included not included Total 3,263 2,295 5,411 3,500 13,021 11,110 4,340 3,250 1,510 1,850 1,890 1,601
Location United States (2) United States (3) Northern California Indoor Northern California Outdoor Southern California Indoor Southern California Outdoor Iowa Massachusetts Wisconsin Class AB (4) Wisconsin Class C (4) Wisconsin Class D (4) Wisconsin Total (4)
Note(s):
1) Treatment before delivery to customer 2) Source: Electric Policy Research Institute (EPRI) 2009. Wastewater estimated based on EPRI 2002. 3) Source: TIAX 2006. 4) Based on water treatment facility size: Class AB >4000 customers, Class C: 1000 to 4000, Class D <1000. Median energy use value reported. 5) Southern California sourcing energy is high because of energy used to pump water from Northern California. 6) Included with Sourcing.
Publication 1019360; EPRI. "Water & Sustainability (Volume 4): U.S. Electricity Consumption for Water Supply & Treatment The Next Half Century."
Source(s): Electric Policy Research Institute. "Program on Technology Innovation: Electric Efficiency Through Water Supply Technologies A Roadmap". 2009.
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Residential Water Use by Source (Billion Gallons per Day) Total Residential Water Use 25,400 24,320 25,290 26,090 28,028 (3) 29,430 Public Supply (1) 22,000 21,000 21,900 22,700 24,438 (3) 25,600 Self-Supply (2) 3,400 3,320 3,390 3,390 3,590 3,830
1) Public supply water use: water withdrawn by public and private water suppliers that furnish water to at least 25 people or have a minimum of 15 connections. 2) Self-supply water use: Water withdrawn from a groundwater or surface-water source by a user rather than being obtained from a public supply. 3) USGS did not provide estimates of residential use from public supplies in 2000. This value was estimated based on the residential portion of public supply in 1995 and applied to the total public supply water use in 2000.
Solley, W.B., et al. Estimated Use of Water in the United States in 1990. U.S. Geological Survey. 1993. U.S. Geological Survey Circular 1081; Solley, W.B., et al. Estimated Use of Water in the United States in 1995. U.S. Geological Survey. 1998. U.S. Geological Survey Circular 1200; Hutson, S.S., et.al. Estimated Use of Water in the United States in 2000. U.S. Geological Survey. 2004. U.S. Geological Survey Circular 1268; Kenny, J.F. et al. "Estimated use of water in the United States in 2005." U.S. Geological Survey. 2009. U.S. Geological Survey Circular 1344.
Source(s): Solley, W.B., et al. Estimated Use of Water in the United States in 1985. U.S. Geological Survey. 1988. U.S. Geological Survey Circular 1004;
8.2.2
1999 Single-Family Home End-Use of Water Consumption per Day (Gallons per Capita) (1) Average gallons per capita per day 18.5 15.0 11.6 10.9 1.6 1.2 1.0 9.5 31.7 101.0 Total Use Percent 18.3% 14.9% 11.5% 10.8% 1.6% 1.2% 1.0% 9.4% 31.4% 100%
Fixture/End Use Toilet Clothes Washer Shower Faucet Other Domestic Bath Dishwasher Leaks Outdoor Use (2) Total (2)
Note(s):
1) Based analysis of 1,188 single-family homes at 12 study locations. 2) Total Water use derived from USGS. Outdoor use is the difference between total and indoor uses.
U.S. Geological Survey. Estimated Use of Water in the United States in 1995. 1998. Table 11 p. 25. Solley, W.B., et. al. U.S. Geological Survey Circular 1200; Vickers, Amy, Handbook of Water Use and Conservation, p. 15, June 2002, WaterPlow Press.
Source(s): American Water Works Association Research Foundation, Residential End Uses of Water. 1999. Mayer, P.W., W.B. DeOreo, et. al.;
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2004 Water Use in Multi-Family Housing Units, In-Rent and Submetered Billing (Gallons per Unit per Day) Estimated Savings Estimated Potential Range of Savings from Submetering from Submetering -15.3% 6% - 24.6%
In-Rent 143
Submetering 121
Based on a regression analysis on a sample of 7,942 properties at 13 sample locations. Results are significant at the 95th percentile. "Ratio utility billing systems", which allocate water bills to tenants based on household characteristics, were also examined in this study, but differences in water use were not found to be statistically significant.
District. Boulder, CO.
Source(s): Mayer, P.W., et al, 2004, National Multiple Family Submetering and Allocation Billing Program Study, Aquacraft, Inc., and East Bay Municipal Utility
8.2.4
Per Capita Use of Hot Water in Single-Family Homes by End Use (Gallons per Capita per Day) (1) Average gallons per capita per day 0.0 3.9 6.3 8.6 0.0 4.2 0.9 1.2 25.1 Household Use gallons per day 0.0 10.1 16.4 22.4 0.0 10.9 2.3 3.1 65.2 Percent of Total Hot Water Use 0.0% 15.5% 25.1% 34.2% 0.0% 16.7% 3.6% 4.8% 100% Percent of End Use that is Hot Water 0.0% 27.8% 73.1% 72.7% 35.1% 78.2% 100% 26.8% 39.6%
Fixture/End Use Toilet Clothes Washer Shower Faucet Other Bath Dishwasher Leaks Total
Note(s):
Source(s): DeOreo,W.B., Mayer, P.W. 2000. Residential End Uses of Hot Water in Single-Family Homes from Flow-Trace Analysis, Aquacraft, Inc. Boulder, CO.
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Commercial Water Use by Source (Billion Gallons per Day) Total Residential Water Use 6940 8290 9580 10313.62506 10170.54795 Public Supply (1) 5710 5900 6690 7202 7102 Self-Supply (2) 1230 2390 2890 3111 3068
1) Public supply water use: water withdrawn by public and private water suppliers that furnish water to at least 25 people or have a minimum of 15 connections. 2) Self-supply water use: Water withdrawn from a groundwater or surface-water source by a user rather than being obtained from a public supply. 3) USGS did not estimate commercial water use in this year. Estimates are based on available data and percentage
8.3.2
Average Water Use of Commercial and Institutional Establishments (Gallons per Establishment per Day) Variation In Use (1) 5.41 8.85 3.12 8.73 12.13 78.5 6.29 7.69 16.29 7.96 6.42 % Total CI Use 0.058 0.04 0.008 0.285 0.088 0.039 0.102 0.088 0.029 0.02 0.02 0.776 % of CI Customers 0.019 0.014 0.004 0.302 0.048 0.042 0.117 0.112 0.052 0.067 0.056 0.833 % Seasonal Use (2) 0.231 0.134 0.142 0.869 0.58 0.232 0.29 0.161 0.194 0.272 0.462
Average Daily Use Hotels and Motels 7113 Laundries/Laundromats 3290 Car Washes 3031 Urban Irrigation 2596 Schools and Colleges 2117 Hospitals/Medical Offices 1236 Office Buildings 1204 Restaurants 906 Food Stores 729 Auto Shops (3) 687 Membership Organizations (4) 629 Total 23538
Note(s):
Estimated from 24 months of water utility billing data in five Western locations: four locations in Southern California and one in
Arizona. 1) ratio of standard deviation of daily use to average of daily use. 2) Percent seasonal use is the difference between the average monthly use and the lowest monthly use over the average monthly use. 3) Includes auto repair shops, dealers, and service stations. 4) Includes religious organizations and other membership-based organizations. Source(s): merican Water Works Association Research Foundation, Commercial and Institutional End Uses of Water, DeOreo, William et. al. 2000. A
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Fixture/End Use (2) Faucets Dishwashing Toilets/Urinals Ice Making Total Indoor Use Building Size (SF)
Logged average daily use (thousand gal) 1.5 - 9.7 Benchmarking Values for Restaurants (6) Gal./SF/year Gal./meal Gal./seat/day Gal./employee/day
Note(s):
Indoor peak instantaneous demand, gpm (5) 21.1 - 59.6 N 90 90 90 90 25th Percentile of Users 130 - 331 6-9 20 - 31 86 - 122
Familiy-style dine-in establishments. Four restaurants in southern California, one in Phoenix, AZ. 1) Water use data for the buildings was collected over a few days. Estimates of annual use were created by accounting for seasonal use and other variables, billing data, and interviews with building managers. 2) Based on three restaurants. 3) Based on four restaurants. 4) Based on five restaurants. 5) gpm = gallons per minute. 6) The study derived efficiency benchmarks by analyzing measured data and audit data. The benchmark was set at the lower 25th percentile of users.
Source(s): American Water Works Association Research Foundation, Commercial and Institutional End Uses of Water, DeOreo, William et. al., 2000
8.3.4
Normalized Annual End Uses of Water in Select Supermarkets in Western United States (1) Range of Water Use (gal/SF) 190 - 320 895 - 1,405 2,190 - 3,390 3,560 - 5,075 3,8000 - 66,000 Indoor peak instantaneous demand (gpm) 29.7 - 58.8 N 38 38 25th Percentile of Users 52 - 64 9 - 16
Fixture/End Use Toilets/Urinals Other/Misc. Indoor (2) Cooling Total Building Size (SF) Logged average daily use (thousand gal) 9.71 - 14.33
Benchmarking Values for Supermarkets (3) Indoor Use with Cooling, gal./SF/year Indoor Use with Cooling, gal./SF/daily transaction
Note(s):
1) Water use data for the buildings was collected over a few days. Estimates of annual use were created by accounting for seasonal use and other variables, billing data, and interviews with building managers. 2) Includes water for sinks, spraying vegetables, cleaning,
etc. 3) The study derived efficiency benchmarks by analyzing measured data and audit data. The benchmark was set at the lower 25th
percentile of users.
Source(s): American Water Works Association Research Foundation, Commercial and Institutional End Uses of Water, DeOreo, William et. al., 2000
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Normalized Annual End Uses of Water in Select Hotels in Western United States (Gallons per Room per Year) (1) Budget Hotels Range of Water Use (gal/room) 986 (2) 2,196 - 2,683 10,203 - 13,724 9,493 - 11,986 439 - 8,007 6047 - 12,027 811 - 1,568 (3) 946 - 9,953 37,703 - 50,696 140 - 209 18.6 - 29.3 40.5 - 106.9 N 98 97 Luxury Hotel Range of Water Use (gal/room) 2331 6297 32453 28047 5351 74480 0 0 82770 297 59.3 130.7
Fixture/End Use Bathtub Faucets Showers Toilets Leaks Laundry Ice making Other/misc. indoor Total Indoor Use Number of Rooms Logged average daily use, kgal: Peak instantaneous demand, gpm: Benchmarking Values for Hotels Indoor Use, gal./day/occupied room Cooling Use, gal./year/occupied room
Note(s):
Based on four budget hotels and one luxury hotel. Three budget hotels in Southern California, one in Phoenix, AZ. Luxury hotel in Los Angeles, CA. 1) Water use data for the buildings was collected over a few days. Estimates of annual use were created by accounting for seasonal use and other variables, billing data, and interviews with building managers. 2) Based on one hotel. 3) Based on three hotels. 5) The study derived efficiency benchmarks by analyzing measured data and audit data. The benchmark was set at the lower 25th percentile of users.
Source(s): American Water Works Association Research Foundation, Commercial and Institutional End Uses of Water, DeOreo, William et. al., 2000.
8.3.6
Normalized Annual End Uses of Water in Two California High Schools Range of Water Use (gal/room) 2.9 - 3.2 1.2 - 2.6 1.0 - 2.3 0.5 - 0.7 0.7 - 1.0 0.9 1.6 - 3.6 0.4 - 0.9 11.1 - 12.3 Average Building Size (SF) 2E+05 Range of Water Use (gal/person) 206 - 271 106 - 186 87 - 165 44 - 47 58 - 58 68 112 31 883 Logged average daily use (thousand gal) 9.1 - 16.4 N 25th Percentile of Users 142 8 - 16 141 3 - 15 35 8 - 20 Indoor peak instantaneous demand (gpm) 41 - 60
Fixture/End Use Toilet Urinal Faucet Shower Kitchen Misc. uses (2) Cooling Leaks Swimming Pool Total Use
Benchmarking Values for Schools (3) Indoor Use, Gal./sq. ft./year Indoor Use, Gal./school day/student Cooling Use, Gal./sq. ft./year
Note(s):
1) Water use data for the buildings was collected over a few days. Estimates of annual use were created by accounting for seasonal use and other variables, billing data, and interviews with building managers. 2) One high school. 3) The study derived efficiency benchmarks by analyzing measured data and audit data. The benchmark was set at the lower 25th percentile of users.
Source(s): American Water Works Association Research Foundation, Commercial and Institutional End Uses of Water, DeOreo, William et. al., 2000.
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Covered Product Lavatory Faucets Toilets Urninals Shower Heads Pre-Rinse Spray Valves Irrigation Control Equipment
762
1) GPM = gallons per minute. 2) GPF = gallons per flush. 3) Final criteria for these urinals and shower heads have not been set. These are criteria levels that WaterSense is considering. 4) WaterSense qualifies individuals as partners via private programs certified by WaterSense.
EPA, Notification of Intent to Develop Draft Performance Specifications for Showerheads and Related Devices, August, 2007; EPA, Notification of Intent to Develop Draft Performance Specifications for High-Efficiency Urinals, May 22, 2008; EPA, Find a WaterSense Irrigation Partner list, Current as of 5/19/2008. Accessed from http://www.epa.gov/watersense/pp/lists/irr_partners.htm.
Source(s): EPA, High-Efficiency Lavatory Faucet Specification, October 1, 2007; EPA, Tank-Type High-Efficiency Toilet Specification, January, 2007.
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Market Indices for 2006 ENERGY STAR Qualified New Single-Family Homes, by Selected State (Thousands) New Single-Family Housing Permits 26.7 1.6 10.3 162.8 5.6 55.6 17.1 5.0 2.1 7.1 107.7 4.8 22.6 27.5 20.0 146.2 1,378.2 Market Penetration 71% 64% 57% 37% 37% 36% 31% 24% 24% 23% 17% 17% 16% 13% 13% 2% 12%
ENERGY STAR Qualified New Homes Nevada 18.9 Alaska 1.0 Iowa 5.9 Texas 60.8 Hawaii 2.1 Arizona 20.1 New Jersey 5.4 Delaware 1.2 Vermont 0.5 Connecticut 1.6 California 18.1 New Hampshire 0.8 Utah 3.6 Ohio 3.5 New York 2.6 Florida 3.3 United States 169.8
Source(s): EPA, ENERGY STAR Qualified New Homes Market Indices for States, http://www.energystar.gov/index.cfm?fuseaction=qhmi.showHomesMarketIndex for top states; e-mail correspondence with EPA ENERGY STAR program for complete data set.
9.1.2
ENERGY STAR Commercial and Institutional Buildings ENERGY STAR labeled buildings by type % of Total Office 1,772 37.8% Supermarket/Grocery 1,366 29.2% School 1,026 21.9% Hotel 301 6.4% Hospital 75 1.6% Bank 69 1.5% Courthouse 32 0.7% Residence Hall/Dormitory 16 0.3% Medical Office 13 0.3% Warehouse 12 0.3% Retail 4 0.1% Total 4,686 100%
Newly Qualified ENERGY STAR Buildings by Year 1999 87 2000 424 2001 213 2002 348 2003 385 2004 658 2005 594 2006 790 2007 1,002 2008 185 Total 4,686
Note(s):
Source(s): EPA. ENERGY STAR Labeled Buildings. Accessed May 27, 2008.
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September 2008
Food Lion Marriott International, Inc Energy Education, Inc. HEB CB Richard Ellis San Diego City Schools Giant Eagle, Inc. Arden Realty, Inc. SUPERVALU, Inc Hines
Note(s): Current as of June 19, 2008.
Source(s): EPA. ENERGY STAR Labeled Buildings. Accessed June 19, 2008.
9.1.4
Specification Dates for ENERGY STAR-Labeled Consumer Electronics and Office Equipment Inception - End Date 1992 1992 1993 1995 1995 1997 1997 1998 1998 - 2008 (proposed) 1998 1999 1999 2000 2001-2005 2002 2005 2006 Dates of updated standard 1995, 1999, 2000, 2007, 2009 1995, 1998, 1999, 2005, 2006 1995, 2000, 2001, 2007, 2009 1995, 2000, 2001, 2007, 2009 1997, 1999, 2007, 2009 2007, 2009 1999, 2007, 2009 2002, 2004, 2005, 2008 2002, 2004, 2005, 2008 (proposed) (1) 2002, 2004, 2005, 2008 (proposed) (1) 2003 2003 2004 2009 2004, 2006, 2008 2008 Managed By EPA EPA EPA EPA EPA EPA EPA EPA EPA EPA EPA EPA EPA EPA EPA EPA EPA
Labeled (Covered) Product Computers Computer Monitors Printers Fax Machines Copiers Scanners Multi-Function Devices TVs VCRs TV-VCRs Consumer Audio Equipment DVD Players Bottled Water Coolers Set-Top Boxes Telephony External Power Adapters Battery Charging Systems
Note(s):
1) Proposed specification update will result in program suspension. STAR Voluntary Labeling Program, November 2007.
Source(s): Kathleen Vokes, EPA. Personal correspondence. 2008; LBNL, Sanchez et. al, DRAFT 2008 Status Report: Savings Estimates for the ENERGY
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September 2008
Heating and Cooling Equipment Central AC Air-Source Heat Pumps Oil Furnaces Gas Furnaces Programable Thermostats Insulation Gas Boilers Oil Boilers Gas-Fired Heat Pumps Roof Products Geothermal Heat Pumps Exhaust Fans Ceiling Fans Residential Appliances Dishwashers Room AC Refrigerators Clothes Washers Dehumidifiers Air Cleaners Water Heaters Other Home Products Residential Lighting Fixtures Windows Screw base CFLs Decorative Light Strings
Managed By EPA EPA EPA EPA EPA EPA EPA EPA EPA EPA EPA EPA EPA
2001, 2007 2000, 2003, 2005 2001, 2003, 2004, 2008 2001, 2004, 2007, 2009 2007, 2008 -
2001, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2007 2003, 2005, 2009 2001, 2004, 2008 -
Source(s): EPA, Kathleen Vokes, Personal correspondence, 2008; LBNL, Sanchez et. al, DRAFT 2008 Status Report: Savings Estimates for the ENERGY STAR Voluntary Labeling Program, November 2007.
9.1.6
Specification Dates for ENERGY STAR-Labeled Commercial and Miscellaneous Products Dates of updated standard 2006, 2007 Managed by EPA EPA EPA EPA EPA DOE EPA EPA
Commercial Products Inception - End Date Commercial Refrigerators and Freezers 2001 Hot Food Holding Cabinets 2003 Commercial Steam Cookers 2003 Commercial Fryers 2003 Cold Beverage Vending Machines 2004 Solid State Lighting 2008 Commercial Dishwashers 2007 Commercial Icemakers 2008 Other Products Transformers Exit Signs Traffic Signals
Source(s): EPA, Kathleen Vokes, Personal correspondence, 2008; LBNL, Sanchez et. al, DRAFT 2008 Status Report: Savings Estimates for the ENERGY STAR Voluntary Labeling Program, November 2007.
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September 2008
1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
Note(s):
Air Cleaners N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 0.1 5% 0.2 13% 0.3 14%
Source(s): LBNL. Climate Change Action Plan spreadsheet (updated 2007)Air Cleaners and Dehumidifiers; D&R International, Ltd. for dishwashers,
9.1.8
ENERGY STAR Residential Lighting Shipments (Millions) and Penetration Rates Indoor 1.6 1% 2.3 1% 3.0 2% 2.8 2% 2.3 1% 5.4 3% 4.7 2% 7.5 3% 8.1 4% 8.5 4% Outdoor 0.4 1% 0.5 2% 2.1 7% 3.5 13% 3.9 14% 2.8 10% 4.0 14% 3.1 11% 3.2 11% 3.4 12% Screw-based CFLs N/A N/A 2.5 0% 13.1 1% 56.9 5% 45.5 4% 58.0 5% 82.5 6% 89.8 7% 145.8 11%
1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
Note(s):
9.1.9
ENERGY STAR Residential Cooling Equipment Shipments (thousands) and Penetration Rate Air-Source Heat Pump 227 27% 341 30% 323 29% 387 31% 384 30% 373 29% 416 29% 212 14% 314 19% 416 22% 568 27% 482 22% Geothermal Heat Pump N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 14 40% 11 29% 15 42% 25 62% 33 66%
1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
Note(s):
Central AC 494 15% 698 16% 679 17% 822 18% 985 20% 969 19% 1,048 22% 747 14% 896 17% 1,045 19% 1,246 19% 1,019 18%
Exhaust Fan N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 92 2% 192 3% 385 6% 663 11% 829 13% 773 12%
Ceiling Fan N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 1,459 8% 1,623 8% 3,311 18% 2,822 14% 3,521 18% 1,974 10%
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September 2008
1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
Note(s):
9.1.11
ENERGY STAR Commercial Product Shipments (Thousands) and Penetration Rate Comm. Refrigeration N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 25 11% 28 12% 40 17% 70 30% 104 44% 83 35% Hot Food Holding Cabinets N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 10 9% 12 11% 11 10% 17 15% Comm. Steam Cookers N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 0 0% 4 10% 4 11% 3 8% Cold Beverage Vending Machines N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 67 26% 69 28% 77 31% Bottled Water Coolers N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 0.0 1% 0.0 1% 0.0 1% 0.4 40% 0.6 56% 0.7 68%
1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
Note(s):
Exit Signs 185 10% 275 13% 494 20% 759 27% 1,071 34% 1,429 41% 1,669 44% 3,502 91% 2,457 63% 1,955 50% 1,426 36%
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September 2008
Telephony N/A 25.5 51% 30.3 58% 18.5 34% 14.7 26% 6.8 12% 7.1 13% 8.4 15% 9.8 17%
9.1.13
ENERGY STAR Office Equipment Shipments (Millions) and Penetration Rate Multi-Function Device N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A 0.0 30% 0.1 30% 1.2 91% 1.6 92% 2.0 92% 7.5 98% 13.0 98% 14.7 98% 16.8 98% 18.3 98%
1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
Note(s):
Computer N.A. 4.9 41% 7.3 50% 13.4 73% 16.2 79% 22.1 86% 29.9 92% 21.3 48% 43.0 87% 45.4 86% 44.9 85% 49.5 86% 54.7 86% 60.0 86% 64.1 86%
Monitor N.A. 2.3 19% 7.3 50% 16.9 93% 19.3 95% 23.3 95% 28.7 95% 16.1 48% 31.7 95% 34.1 95% 34.9 95% 33.3 95% 34.8 95% 24.7 65% 13.9 35%
Printer N/A 5.5 80% 9.2 98% 11.1 98% 13.1 100% 15.1 100% 18.3 100% 23.0 100% 22.6 100% 24.4 85% 18.8 95% 16.0 98% 16.3 100% 17.4 100% 13.9 100%
Fax N/A N/A N/A 0.2 12% 1.2 56% 2.5 73% 3.0 91% 2.9 99% 2.6 99% 2.5 99% 2.2 99% 2.0 99% 1.5 99% 1.3 99% 1.2 99%
Copier N/A N/A N/A 0.4 24% 0.6 35% 0.8 45% 1.0 65% 0.9 87% 0.8 94% 0.6 90% 0.3 90% 1.3 90% 1.3 90% 1.3 90% 1.2 90%
Scanner N/A N/A 1% N/A 1% N/A 2% N/A 2% 1.3 8% 1.6 9% 3.4 15% 4.7 21% 5.0 17% 5.9 30% 6.7 41% 6.9 42% 7.0 40% 7.1 51%
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September 2008
California Pennsylvania Oregon Washington Michigan Virginia Massachusetts Texas Ilinois New York All Other States National Totals
Source(s): U.S. Green Building Council Web site, accessed July 2008, http://www.usgbc.org/LEED/Project/CertifiedProjectList.aspx.
9.2.2
LEED for New Construction, by Version NC 1.0 3 1 1 3 0 8 NC 2.0 12 75 76 0 98 261 NC 2.1 35 187 239 0 264 725 NC 2.2 3 25 41 0 19 88 All New Construction 53 288 357 3 381 1,082
Source(s): U.S Green Building Council Web site, accessed July 2008, http://www.usgbc.org/LEED/Project/CertifiedProjectList.aspx.
Source(s): U.S. Green Building Council Web site, accessed July 2008, http://www.usgbc.org/LEED/Project/CertifiedProjectList.aspx.
Source(s): U.S. Green Building Council Web site, accessed July 2008, http://www.usgbc.org/LEED/Project/CertifiedProjectList.aspx.
Source(s): U.S. Green Building Council Web site, accessed July 2008, http://www.usgbc.org/LEED/Project/CertifiedProjectList.aspx.
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September 2008
Private-Sector Corporations Local Governments Nonprofit Corporations State Governments Federal Government Other Total
Source(s): Building Design and Construction, White Paper on Sustainability, Nov. 2003.
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September 2008
Individuals Certified: Number of Certificates (2): Certifications Air Conditioning Air Distribution Heat Pump Gas Furnance Oil Furnance Hydronics Gas Hydronics Oil Regional Breakdown Northeast South Midwest West
Note(s):
1)Third party certification program for heating and cooling professionals to ensure knowledge of proper installation and servicing of HVAC/R equipment. 2) Includes individuals holding refrigeration certifications.
American Technician Excellence Program web site, http://www.natex.org/about.htm
Source(s): Phone correspondence with Pat Murphy, vice president of certifications, North American Technician Excellence program; North
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September 2008
Case Study, The Adam Joseph Lewis Center for Environmental Studies, Oberlin College; Oberlin, Ohio (Education)
Floors:
Footprint:
3 Classrooms (1) 1 Conference Room Auditorium, 100 seats 6 Small Offices Wastewater Treatment Facility Shell Windows
Green Tint Triple Pane Argon Fill Insulating Glass Grey Tint Double Pane Argon Fill Insulating Glass Fenestration(square feet) Window Wall(2) window/wall l Atrium, Triple Pane (3) North 1,675 4,372 38% l U-Factor 0.34 South 2,553 4,498 58% l SHGC 0.26 East 1,084 2,371 46% l West 350 2,512 14% l Overall 6,063 14,153 43% l
Material:
Wall/Roof Wall : Roof: HVAC Offices/Classrooms: Atrium: Auditorium: Individual GSHPs (5) 1 Large GSHP for ventilation Radiant Flooring Hydronic Heating System 1 Standard Range Water Heat Pump COP(4) 3.9-4.6 3.8 4.2 Main Material Face Brink Steel/Stone Ballast R-Value 19 30
Corridors/Others: Atrium:
0.45 0.93
Total Building:
0.79
Energy/Power PV System: 60 kW grid-tie roof system Net Annual Energy Usage (thousand Btu/SF*year) 16.4
Note(s): 1) Two classrooms seat 36 and one seats 18. 2) Wall total area includes window area. 3) Atrium has only south, north, and east facing windows. 4) Coefficient of performance ranges due to various sizes; GSHPs have the greatest COP 5) GSHP is Ground water Source Heat Pump. Source(s): NREL, Energy Performance Evaluation of an Educational Facility: The Adam Joseph Lewis Center for Environmental Studies, Oberlin College, Oberlin, Ohio, November 2004, Table 4.1 p. 10 Table 4.2 p.12 and Table 6.5 p. 94; NREL, Lessons Learned from Case Studies of Six High-Performance Buildings, June 2006, p. 5 Table A-2 p. 130
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September 2008
Case Study, The Cambria Department of Environmental Protection Office Building, Ebensburg, Pennsylvania (Office)
Building Design Floor Area: 34,500 SF Open office space (1) Break room
Floors:
2 Two small labratories Two mechanical rooms Conference rooms Telecom room
Shell Windows Material: Triple Pane, low-e with Aluminum Frames and Wood Frames Triple Pane Aluminum Frames U-Factor 0.24 Wall/Roof Wall : Roof: HVAC 12 Ground Source Heat Pumps 12 Auxiliary Electric Resistance Heaters Lighting Power Densities(W/SF) Open Office Area: 0.75 Office Area Task Lighting(4): 0.5 Energy/Power PV System: Net Annual Energy Usage (thousand Btu/SF*year) Total Capacities(thousand Btu/hr) 644 (2) 382 (3) Main Material Insulating Concrete Forms Decking and Insulation R-Value 27.0 33.0 Triple Pane Wood Frames U-Factor
0.26
Note(s):
1) Office space is for 100 people. This accounts for approximately 20,000 SF of the total building floorspace. 2) Cooling capacity 3) Auxiliary heating capacity. 4) Task lighting is in addition to the open office area LPD and is only in select cubicals and offices. 5) Includes 17.2 kW of roof PV array and two 0.5 KW ground level single axis tracking PV arrays.
Source(s): NREL, Analysis of the Design and Energy Performance of the Pennsylvania Department of Enverionmental Proctection Cambria Office Building, March 2005, p. ; NREL, Lessons Learned from Case Studies of Six High-Performance Buildings, June 2006, p. 5 Table A-2 p. 130.
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September 2008
Building Design Vistors Center (1) Shell Windows South/East Glass North/West Glass Window/Wall Ratio: Wall/Roof Trombe Walls: Vistor Center Walls: Comfort Station Walls: Roof: HVAC
8,800 SF
2,756 SF
Fee Station
170 SF
Type U-Factor Double Pane Insulating Glass, Low-e, Aluminum Frames, Thermally Broken 0.44 Double Pane Insulating Glass, Heat Mirror, Aluminum Frames, Thermally Broken 0.37 28%
Materials Effective R-Value Low-iron Patterned Trombe Wall, CMU (4) 2.3 Wood Siding, Rigid Insulation Board, Gypsum 16.5 Wood Siding, Rigid Insulation Board, CMU (4) 6.6 Wood Shingles; Sheathing; Insulated Roof Panels 30.9
Heating Trombe Walls Electric Radiant Ceiling Panels Lighting Power Densities(W/SF) Main Area: (5) Offices: 1.0 Bookstore: 0.9
Note(s):
1) Includes office, bookstore, and service areas 2) restroom complex 3) Solar heat gain coefficient 4) Concrete masonry unit 5) The main vistors center area is handled almost entirely with daylighting. Auxiliary fluorescent lighting is used only occasionally to supplement.
Source(s): NREL, Evaluation of the Low-Energy Design and Energy Performance of the Zion National Park Visitors Center, Feb. 2005, p. 23-37; NREL, Lessons Learned from Case Studies of Six High-Performance Buildings, June 2006, p. 5 Table A-2 p. 130.
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September 2008
Building Design Floor Area: 31,000 SF 2 Floors of open office space Attached pavalion containing: Shell Windows Type:
Floors:
Footprint:
Meeting space
Kitchen
Staff dining
Conference room
U-Factor 0.244
Wall/Roof Interior Wall Exterior Wall Roof Material plywood, gypsum, SIP foam, and sheathing gypsum and insulated metal framing plywood, gypsum, SIP foam, and sheathing Effective R-Value 28.0 9.3 38.0
HVAC 18 ground source heat pumps fin and tube radiators connected to a propane boiler 1 air condtioning unit Lighting Power Densities (W/SF) First Floor: 1.2 Second Floor: 1.6 Conference Room: 1.4 Energy/Power PV System: Net Annual Energy Usage (thousand Btu/SF*year):
Note(s):
1) Width varies from about 74 ft. to 59 ft. along different sections of the length. 2) Solar heat gain coefficient NREL, Lessons Learned from Case Studies of Six High-Performance Buildings, June 2006, p. 5 Table A-2 p. 130.
Source(s): NREL, Analysis of the Energy Performance of the Chesapeake Bay Foundations Philip Merrill Environmental Center, April 2005, p. 6-24;
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September 2008
Building Design Floor Area: 10,000 SF Offices Laboratories Shell Windows Viewing Windows: Clerestory Windows:
Material Double Pane, Grey Tint, Low-e Double Pane, Clear, Low-e
HVAC VAV air handling unit Hot water supply paralell VAV boxes Direct and Indirect evaporative cooling system Single zone roof top unit(4) Hot Water Coil(4) Lighting Power Densities(W/SF) Interior Overhead 0.73 Emergency 0.02 Energy/Power Net Annual Energy Usage (kBtu/SF*year):
Note(s):
Exterior Building
0.05 0.80
23.02
1) That second floor is actually and mechanical mezzaine level. 2) Solar heat gain coefficient 3) Includes 492 SF of viewing windows and 642 SF of clerestory windows. 4) Only used to handle the conference room.
Source(s): NREL, Evaluation of the Energy Performance and Design Process of the Thermal Test Facility at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, February 2005, p. 29-54; NREL, Lessons Learned from Case Studies of Six High-Performance Buildings, June 2006, p. 5 Table A-2 p. 130.
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September 2008
Building Design Floor Area: 357,000 SF Floors: 27 Black-Water Treatment Facility (2)
700 578
Shell Windows Material: Double Glazed, Low-e, Thermal Breaks with Insulated Spacers Operable windows 0.68 0.35 0.47 Fixed Windows 0.68 0.35 0.41
Visual Transminttance Solar Heat Gain Coefficient U-Factor Wall/Roof Exterior Walls: Roof:
Material Insulated brick and concrete block Roof top garden(green roof)
HVAC Two direct-fired natural gas absorption chillers 4-Pipe fan-coil units in individual aparments Power/Energy(3) PV System(4): 1,300 SF (76 custom panels) of west facing PV rated for 11 kW . These panels are integrated into the building faade. 151 SF PV located in the entrance canopy. Rated for 662 W. 286 standard PV modules mounted on the south and west walls. Rated for 21 kW. Unit Average Electricity Consumption(5): Building Natural Gas Consumption(6): 15,681 104.1 kBtu/year kBtu/SF*year
Predicted End-Use Consumption(kBtu/SF*year) Heating 60.8 Plug Loads and Equipment 6.7 Cooling 20.7 Domestic Hot Water 7.9 Lighting 7.4 Cooking, Vertical Transportation, and Other 6.8 Fans/Pumps 11.4 Total 121.7
Note(s): 1) 84 hours per person weekly, 89 visitors weekly, 8 hours per visitor weekly. 2)30,000 gallon storage tank. Water is used for toilets and cooling tower. 3) Appliances in units are ENERGY STAR qualified. (4) PV system designed to handle 5% of building peak non-residential electrical load (i.e. corridor lighting). 5) Includes only electric that was submetered to each apartment. 6) 2007 building consumption.
http://leedcasestudies.usgbc.org/overview.cfm?ProjectID=273.
Source(s): ASHRAE, High Peformance Buildings, NYC's Living Lesson, p. 56-65, Summer 2008; USGBC, LEED Case Studies, The Solaire,
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