Does Energy Efficiency Reduce Emissions and Peak Demand? A Case Study of 50 Years of Space Heating in Melbourne

This paper examines the relationship between space heating energy efficiency and two related but distinct measures; greenhouse mitigation, and peak demand. The historic role of Melbourne’s space heating provides an opportunity to assess whether improvements in energy efficiency lead to sustained red...

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Main Author: Graham Palmer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2012-07-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/4/7/1525
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spelling doaj-2d70d482ea754847b123f3e8f252d7ad2020-11-24T22:50:14ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502012-07-01471525156010.3390/su4071525Does Energy Efficiency Reduce Emissions and Peak Demand? A Case Study of 50 Years of Space Heating in MelbourneGraham PalmerThis paper examines the relationship between space heating energy efficiency and two related but distinct measures; greenhouse mitigation, and peak demand. The historic role of Melbourne’s space heating provides an opportunity to assess whether improvements in energy efficiency lead to sustained reductions in energy consumption or whether rebound factors “take back” efficiency gains in the long run. Despite significant and sustained improvements in appliance efficiency, and the thermal efficiency of new building fabrics, the per-capita heating energy consumption has remained remarkably stable over the past 50 years. Space heating efficiency is bound up with notions of comfort, sufficiency and lifestyle, and the short-run gains from efficiency become incorporated into a new set of norms. It is this evolution of cultural norms that reconciles the contradiction between the short-run gains from efficiency measures, with the efficiency rebound that becomes evident over the long-term. The related, but distinct peak demand measure can be influenced by efficiency measures, but energy efficiency measures will not alter the requirement for large-scale conventional energy to provide affordable and reliable winter heating.http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/4/7/1525energy efficiencyspace heatingpeak demandgreenhouse emissions
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Graham Palmer
spellingShingle Graham Palmer
Does Energy Efficiency Reduce Emissions and Peak Demand? A Case Study of 50 Years of Space Heating in Melbourne
Sustainability
energy efficiency
space heating
peak demand
greenhouse emissions
author_facet Graham Palmer
author_sort Graham Palmer
title Does Energy Efficiency Reduce Emissions and Peak Demand? A Case Study of 50 Years of Space Heating in Melbourne
title_short Does Energy Efficiency Reduce Emissions and Peak Demand? A Case Study of 50 Years of Space Heating in Melbourne
title_full Does Energy Efficiency Reduce Emissions and Peak Demand? A Case Study of 50 Years of Space Heating in Melbourne
title_fullStr Does Energy Efficiency Reduce Emissions and Peak Demand? A Case Study of 50 Years of Space Heating in Melbourne
title_full_unstemmed Does Energy Efficiency Reduce Emissions and Peak Demand? A Case Study of 50 Years of Space Heating in Melbourne
title_sort does energy efficiency reduce emissions and peak demand? a case study of 50 years of space heating in melbourne
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2012-07-01
description This paper examines the relationship between space heating energy efficiency and two related but distinct measures; greenhouse mitigation, and peak demand. The historic role of Melbourne’s space heating provides an opportunity to assess whether improvements in energy efficiency lead to sustained reductions in energy consumption or whether rebound factors “take back” efficiency gains in the long run. Despite significant and sustained improvements in appliance efficiency, and the thermal efficiency of new building fabrics, the per-capita heating energy consumption has remained remarkably stable over the past 50 years. Space heating efficiency is bound up with notions of comfort, sufficiency and lifestyle, and the short-run gains from efficiency become incorporated into a new set of norms. It is this evolution of cultural norms that reconciles the contradiction between the short-run gains from efficiency measures, with the efficiency rebound that becomes evident over the long-term. The related, but distinct peak demand measure can be influenced by efficiency measures, but energy efficiency measures will not alter the requirement for large-scale conventional energy to provide affordable and reliable winter heating.
topic energy efficiency
space heating
peak demand
greenhouse emissions
url http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/4/7/1525
work_keys_str_mv AT grahampalmer doesenergyefficiencyreduceemissionsandpeakdemandacasestudyof50yearsofspaceheatinginmelbourne
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