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Zero Energy Buildings: A Critical Look at the Definition

Torcellini, P., Pless, S. and Deru, M., Crawley, D.
2006
ACEEE Summer Study, Pacific Grove, California, August 14?18, 2006


Torcellini, P., Pless, S. and Deru, M., Crawley, D., (2006), "Zero Energy Buildings: A Critical Look at the Definition", ACEEE Summer Study, Pacific Grove, California, August 14?18, 2006.
Abstract:
A net zero-energy building (ZEB) is a residential or commercial building with greatly reduced energy needs through efficiency gains such that the balance of energy needs can be supplied with renewable technologies. Despite the excitement over the phrase "zero energy," we lack a common definition, or even a common understanding, of what it means. In this paper, we use a sample of current generation low-energy buildings to explore the concept of zero energy: what it means, why a clear and measurable definition is needed, and how we have progressed toward the ZEB goal.

The way the zero energy goal is defined affects the choices designers make to achieve this goal and whether they can claim success. The ZEB definition can emphasize demand-side or supply strategies and whether fuel switching and conversion accounting are appropriate to meet a ZEB goal. Four well-documented definitions¡ªnet-zero site energy, net-zero source energy, net-zero energy costs, and net-zero energy emissions¡ªare studied; pluses and minuses of each are discussed. These definitions are applied to a set of low-energy buildings for which extensive energy data are available. This study shows the design impacts of the definition used for ZEB and the large difference between definitions. It also looks at sample utility rate structures and their impact on the zero energy scenarios.


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Author Information and Other Publications Notes
Torcellini, P.
  1. Assessment of the technical potential for achieving net zero-energy buildings in the commercial sector  
Pless, S.
     
Deru, M.
     
Crawley, D.
  1. Assessment of the technical potential for achieving net zero-energy buildings in the commercial sector
  2. Building environmental assessment methods: applications and development trends
  3. Comparative assessment of environmental performance tools and the role of the Green Building Challenge
  4. Contrasting the capabilities of building energy performance simulation programs
  5. EnergyPlus: creating a new-generation building energy simulation program  



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