August 15, 2007
by Larisa Brass
RenewableEnergyAccess.com
"If we continue to construct the same kind of inefficient buildings
that put high demands on the power grid, we will have to build
additional supply-side infrastructure to serve them. What we need is to
fundamentally change the way we approach the construction and operation
of our buildings. If done right, we, as a nation, can have our cake and
eat it too." -- Patrick Hughes, ORNL, buildings technology research
program
The cul-de-sac of 40 small houses is everything you might expect in
American suburbia. Minivans sit parked in perfectly proportioned
driveways. Clumps of kids ride bikes around the neighborhood. Dogs bark
behind backyard fences. A nearby four-lane drones in the background.
What is not so obvious is that this tiny community offers a peephole to
the future -- a future in which homes will generate and conserve as
much energy as they require.
Most of the time, even resident Kim Charles does not notice the solar
panels on her roof, the whisper of her SEER 17 heat pump water heater,
the airtight, moisture-managed construction of structural insulated
panels, the integrated design that allows most of the home's plumbing
to reside within one wall, saving precious energy.
What Charles does notice is a power bill that amounts to less than a
daily cup of coffee. Thanks to a 15 cent-per-kilowatt-hour credit paid
by the Tennessee Valley Authority for electricity piped back to the
power grid, her meter literally runs backwards on sunny days. In 2006,
she paid an average of 41 cents per day for electricity.
Charles's home is among five in this Habitat for Humanity community
located in Lenoir City, Tenn., and outfitted with the latest in
energy-saving technologies as part of a research project designed and
implemented by Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) and co-funded by
the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and the Tennessee Valley Authority.
The project serves as a linchpin in a broad array of research programs
at ORNL that strive to address America's most energy-inefficient
sector: buildings.
Appetite Control
Americans work, live and play in boxes of brick, wood, glass, steel and
concrete-artificial environments typically kept at constant temperature
and lighting levels regardless of season or time of day and
notwithstanding the presence or departure of the occupants. The results
are obvious. In the United States, buildings command 40% of the
nation's overall energy use, ranking above both industry, at 32%, and
transportation, at 28%. Buildings demand 71% of domestic electric power
in the U.S. and 55% of the nation's natural gas-and produce 43% of U.S.
carbon emissions.
"Creating more energy-efficient buildings is not only part of the
overall solution but is the number one most cost-effective opportunity
to reduce the nation's energy consumption and affect climate change,"
says Jeff Christian, a buildings technology researcher at ORNL and
coordinator of the Habitat for Humanity project. "Yes, we must replace
oil with biofuels. Yes, we must pursue other supply-side solutions in
an environmentally acceptable manner. But there is enormous potential
to reduce energy demand in the buildings sector, and that is by far the
cheapest solution if we really want to address this problem."
Because the nearly 5 million commercial buildings and 112 million
households use a collective 38.8 quadrillion BTUs of energy each year,
curtailing consumption is a tall order but has enormous potential.
Space heating and cooling and ventilation demand most of that power,
followed closely by lighting, then water heating. Refrigeration,
electronics, computers and other items add up to their own significant
and growing slice of the energy pie.
Buildings' appetite for energy has been on the rise as a result of
natural population growth and related development of homes, apartment
complexes, shopping malls, schools, office buildings and healthcare
facilities. The amount of energy required for each person occupying
those buildings is climbing as well.
Residential floor space per capita in the U.S. is growing, driven by
construction of larger homes as well as a decline in the average number
of occupants, and the number of power-hungry accoutrements to be found
in today's households—from computers to video games to plasma
televisions—is on the rise. As a result, residential energy
consumption, unless aggressively addressed, is expected to grow 1% per
year until 2025.
On the commercial side, energy use is projected to increase an average
annual rate of 2% between now and 2025, driven primarily by use of
computers and other office equipment. Such growth has placed stress on
aging infrastructure, which, coupled with weather incidents that
include the feisty tornado and hurricane seasons and record-breaking
heat waves of recent years, result in periods of peak demand and power
outages that hamper business and boost energy costs. Soaring prices for
natural gas and petroleum also contribute to the problem, and experts
believe this combination of factors has created a critical mass,
driving the nation toward long overdue adoption of energy-efficient
technologies and construction practices.
"If we continue to construct the same kind of inefficient buildings
that put high demands on the power grid, we will have to build
additional supply-side infrastructure to serve them," says Patrick
Hughes, leader of ORNL's buildings technology research program. "What
we need is to fundamentally change the way we approach the construction
and operation of our buildings. If done right, we, as a nation, can
have our cake and eat it too. We can spend less going forward on
buildings and supply-side infrastructure and vastly reduce the energy
consumption and climate changing emissions of the built environment."
ORNL researchers are supporting a DOE initiative to develop affordable,
net-zero-energy housing by 2020 and zero-energy commercial buildings by
2025. To achieve this goal, scientists and engineers must break broad
new ground in every aspect of building construction and operating
practice, Hughes says.
Whenever affordable, these high-performance buildings must be outfitted
with renewable sources of energy, minimizing the demand for fossil
fuels such as natural gas reserves or coal-fired power plants that
supply electricity to the grid. Whether heat pump systems that tap
geothermal energy in the ground around the building, solar panels for
residential developments such as the Lenoir City Habitat community,
combined heat and power systems for commercial buildings or a range of
other up-and-coming technologies, the ultimate goal is to construct
buildings that can support their own energy needs in a way that is
affordable, sustainable and energy efficient.
At ORNL, researchers have been plugging away at the problem since the
energy crisis of the 1970s, when U.S. DOE predecessors began funding
research into energy efficiency initiatives. Through the work of
pioneering researchers, whose message regarding the U.S. environmental
impact of energy consumption was not always popular, ORNL demonstrated
the potential for energy efficiency long before the term became a
buzzword.
Today ORNL participates in a number of programs that intersect with
builders and suppliers in an effort to bring new energy-efficient
technologies and construction supplies to market. Laboratory
researchers have worked with industry to develop and demonstrate energy
savings benefits of infrared-blocking pigments used to make
dark-colored metal, concrete tile and asphalt shingle roofing that is
highly solar reflective, reducing the need for air conditioning. ORNL
has worked with industry partners to develop low-cost, more
energy-efficient second- and third-generation foam insulation materials.
The Laboratory has developed software tools to assess the potential for
moisture-related damage in construction materials; provide energy
efficiency ratings for entire buildings; audit homes for weatherization
as part of DOE's low-income Weatherization Assistance Program and
perform analysis to support the design of more efficient heat pumps and
other equipment. In addition, ORNL has helped guide development of
standards related to insulation, materials that make up a building's
envelope—that is, walls, floor, ceiling, roof, windows and doors-and
moisture design.
While government researchers have been focused on energy efficiency for
a number of years, the construction industry and homeowners have been
slower to embrace change. Pat Love remembers when the Laboratory began
promoting the expertise of DOE laboratories to homeowners in 1980. ORNL
serves as the lead national laboratory in communications for the
Building America program, a public-private partnership that conducts
research and sets standards for energy-efficient homes. In this
capacity, Love attends a number of trade shows and seminars each year,
armed with educational pamphlets on how energy efficiency can be
incorporated into building design and construction.
"People did not stop by our booth," she says. "They were suspicious of
the government. They did not care about energy efficiency. They cared
about cost." In the early 1990s, the program began targeting
homebuilders rather than homeowners, offering guidance and training on
energy-efficient building practices. That effort produced greater
results, but, still, many in the industry have been slow to change
their ways.
The past three to four years, however, have marked a detectable shift,
driven by the very consumers who largely ignored the Laboratory's early
efforts. A new demographic, the baby boomers—armed with disposable
incomes, looming retirement and a sense of social responsibility
remnant from their former hippie days—is creating demand for "green"
construction incorporating energy-efficient and renewable energy
technologies and building practices. Love says she receives a steady
stream of queries from people looking to renovate or build a home and
asking questions about energy efficiency.