UNDP GEF BEE Project: Energy Efficiency Improvements in Commercial Buildings (EECB) November 2016, New Delhi Dr. S N Srinivas Program Analyst, UNDP India sn.srinivas@undp.org
Energy Efficiency Improvements in Commercial Buildings (EECB)» Project Goal & Objective Reduction of GHG emissions from new commercial buildings through compliance with ECBC Operationalisation of the Energy Conservation Building Code (ECBC) for new commercial buildings» Project Duration: October 2010 March 2017 Budget: Total: US$ 21,027,660 US$ 5,200,000 (Global Environment Facility) US$ 2,976,596 (Bureau of Energy Efficiency) US$ 1,787,234 (SDC) US$ 11,063,830 (DLF)
Project Components 1. Strengthen institutional capacities at various levels on the enactment and enforcement of ECBC for commercial buildings 2. Enhance technical capacity and expertise of local building practitioners and service providers 3. Increase number of new commercial buildings that are ECBC compliant 4. Readily available and easily accessible/shared information and knowledge products on best practices regarding EE building technologies and measures
1. Strengthen Institutional Capacity» Key targets: At least 20 states and 20 cities issue ECBC notification Activity: ECBC Cell Established 5 state level ECBC cells in Uttar Pradesh, Karnataka, Chhattisgarh, Punjab and Haryana. 3 to 4 technical staff provided by the project review existing bye-laws, prepare documents to make ECBC amendments to provide input to issue ECBC notification Achievement 1: Ten States have notified ECBC, Rajasthan, Odisha, Uttarakhand, UT of Puducherry, Andhra Pradesh, Punjab, Telangana, Haryana, West Bengal and Karnataka. Achievement 2: PWD, Karnataka has issued Schedule of Rates Way to go: Ten more states have amended bye-laws and are in the process of issuing ECBC notification Uttar Pradesh, Kerala, Chhattisgarh, Gujarat, Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra, Bihar, Himachal Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh and Delhi.
1. Strengthen Institutional Capacity Provided ECBC compliance kit» Five ECBC Cells are provided with DesignBuilder and IDA ICE simulation software for performing ECBC compliance analysis on upcoming building Way to go» Procurement of software is in progress for 9 more states» Received Request for ECBC cells from Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Kerala, Delhi, West Bengal» Expression of interests received from the cities of Dharmashala and Cuttack Looking ahead» All states issue ECBC notification» Building software's are used to comply to ECBC» States develop a robust EMIS system, data measurement, verification and monitoring system [Russian model under consideration for piloting]» State enforce ECBC compliance [Building energy passport Croatian model under consideration]
2. Technical Capacity Development Completed tasks» Developed benchmark for Energy Performance Index for commercial buildings for different category of buildings based on total sample size of 1160 buildings.» Trained 89 ECBC Master Trainers in 9 training programs» Trained 3300 building sector stakeholders on ECBC implementation in 82 training programs. Ongoing tasks» Training programmes in different states New tasks to be undertaken» Consolidation of different manuals» Including Energy efficiency in buildings in professional course curricula like IITs, SPA
2. Technical Capacity Development [EPIs of Different Categories of Buildings kwh/m 2 /year] Type Office building, less than 50% airconditioning Office building with more than 50% air-conditioning Warm and humid Composite Hot and dry Moderate 101 86 90 94 93 182 179 173 179 178 Simple average Shopping mall 428 327 273 257 321 BPOs 452 437-433 440 Hotels up to 3 star 215 201 167 107 173 Hotels above 3 star 333 290 250 313 297 Hospitals 275 264 261 247 262 Institutes 150 117 106 129 126
3. ECBC Compliance Demonstration Target: 1.47 million m2 of Energy Efficient Model Buildings (EEMBs) across 5 climatic zones Support from project 1. Pilot mobilization [12 buildings in public sector mobilization, 50 to 60 private buildings to be added] 2. Design assistance 3. Construction monitoring 4. Post construction compliance validation 5. Post occupancy compliance validation 6. Setting up measurement, verification and monitoring systems UPERC, Lucknow Dhanvantri OPD, Jaipur
ECBC in Karnataka and KK Guest House» Bengaluru is the city in India with highest commercial office stock, 154 million square feet» 2014 Karnataka Government notified ECBC in its gazette» Kumara Krupa guest house 19875 m2 of built up space 162 regular rooms, 40 VIP rooms on 8 floors Estimated EPI is 107 kwh/m2/year Estimated annual saving is 700,000 kwh Additional expenditure Rs 2 crore, 5 years is the estimated pay back period Estimated GHG reduction is 570 tco2 per year» Karnataka PWD has building stock of 5.1 million m2 of commercial building. If this can be converted to ECBC compliant, it would reduce 102,000,000 kwh of electricity [1000 villages can be electrified] For illustration, not to quote Interventions: 1. Building envelope: AAC cavity wall assembly, heat reflective tiles on roof tops, XPS extruded polystyrene insulation boards, recessed window with high performance double glazing with UPVC frame. 2. HVAC air cooled variable refrigerant flow system for each wing of each floor. 3. Star rated transformer, APFC system to improve power factor 4. Solar water heating 5. LED and T5 lights
3. ECBC Compliance Demonstration Status of Public Sector Buildings S.NO. Building Climatic Zone Category Status 1 Roads and Bridges Development Corporation, Kochi Warm and Humid Shopping Mall Feasibility prepared and approved by building owner, However, the project is downsized Under construction 2 Academic Block in SMS Medical College, Jaipur Composite Institutes & IT parks category 3 K.K. Guest House, Bangalore Temperate Hotel category Under construction and ECMs implemented 4 Dhanvantri OPD block, SMS Hospital, Jaipur Composite Hospital category Under construction and ECMs implemented 5 Chhattisgarh Samvad Office building Warm and Humid Office building Under construction and ECMs implemented 6 UPERC, Lucknow Composite Office building Under construction and ECMs implemented 7 Hubli Court Complex, Karnataka Warm and Humid Office Building Under construction and ECMs implemented 8 Medical College, Tumkur, Karnataka Warm and Humid Institute category Feasibility report prepared and accepted by building owner. 9 Medical College, Bagalkote, Karnataka Warm and Humid Institute category Feasibility report prepared and accepted by building owner. 10 Medical College, Haveri, Karnataka Warm and Humid Institute category Feasibility report prepared and accepted by building owner. 11 Medical college, Chitradurga, Bangalore Warm and Humid Institute category Feasibility report prepared and accepted by building owner. 12 D.C. Office complex at Mysore, Bangalore Warm and Humid Institute category Feasibility report prepared and accepted by building owner.
4. Information and Awareness Enhancement Outputs 1. Website developed (www.eecbindia.com) 2. Report on Market Assessment of Energy Efficient Building Materials for Implementing Energy Efficiency in Buildings prepared Report on Market assessment of energy efficient building materials 3. Mobile based ECBC APP launched 4. A compendium book 5. Audio-visuals on four buildings and one consolidated 6. EECB Newsletter International Conference on Energy Efficient Buildings held in Dec 2015
EECB Sub Community» Launched in April 2016» 500 members; mostly practitioners, Russia» Posted about 200 daily postings[cutting edge green buildings in London, Stockholm, San Francisco, etc. economic impacts, etc.» UNDP, Russia created a web-page of the sub-community on their website.» To become member, please send mail to: ramesh.jalan@one.un.org
Next Actions» Update and upgradation of website, UNDP project web page» Support a few cities to issue ECBC notification first come first serve basis» MoU with UNDP Russia [proposed] learning from Pskov and other regions on EMIS implementation Train the trainers by Russian building energy efficiency experts in India [two programmes] Demonstrate EMIS in project pilot buildings Include energy efficiency in buildings in education» Scale up plan
Dr. S N Srinivas sn.srinivas@undp.org Thank You!