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Building Energy Efficiency

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Manage episode 361681294 series 3330337
Content provided by the MREA and The MREA. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by the MREA and The MREA or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

75% of all electricity consumption occurs in buildings. With a goal to fully electrify our building energy use, more buildings will be moving their heating, cooking, and operations systems from natural gas, propane, diesel, and fuel oil to grid electricity. Pair this with home and business electric vehicle charging and the obvious result is that the amount of electricity use in buildings is set to dramatically increase.

If we reduce building energy use by 20% in both the commercial and industrial sectors today, we could save more than $80 billion annually on utility bills. And according to the US Dept. of Energy Building Technologies Office, the on-site deployment of solar, battery, and energy management technologies to flex electricity demand to better meet supply will lead to between $100 and $200 billion in electricity cost savings. This is a significant saving when considering that the National Renewable Energy Lab Electrification Futures Study estimates that full electrification would increase US electricity system costs by at least $450 billion.

In short, if we want to keep energy bills down and temper electricity price increases, building energy efficiency and demand flexibility is a critical first step to electrification. Join us in conversation with Elizabeth Turner, founder of Precipitate Architecture, to explore strategies for building electrification and energy efficiency in the Upper Midwest.

Host: Nick Hylla, MREA Executive Director

Guest: Elizabeth Turner, Architect and Passive Building Consultant, Precipitate

0:20 – Nick introduces U.S. energy consumption

1:40 – Energy Efficiency’s role in cost savings for an electrified future

3:30 – Incentives for clean energy technologies

7:40 – Equity, Electrification, and Energy Efficiency

9:00 – Weatherization techniques

11:35 – Energy Efficient Building techniques

14:33 – Air source heat pumps and the preconditions needed

16:59 – Priorities and Challenges to Energy Efficiency

19:29 – Measuring energy efficiency

23:10 – Building code

26:27 – Energy Monitoring and management

27:20 – Federal legislation’s impact on energy efficiency

31:24 - State efforts to leverage IRA funds

35:05 – Energy efficiency’s value in the housing market

-Get Connected:

Precipitate Architecture: www.precipitatearch.com

The Energy Fair: www.theenergyfair.org

Midwest Renewable Energy Association: www.midwestrenew.org

Contact: Info@riseupmidwest.org

  continue reading

44 episodes

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Building Energy Efficiency

Rise Up

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Manage episode 361681294 series 3330337
Content provided by the MREA and The MREA. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by the MREA and The MREA or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

75% of all electricity consumption occurs in buildings. With a goal to fully electrify our building energy use, more buildings will be moving their heating, cooking, and operations systems from natural gas, propane, diesel, and fuel oil to grid electricity. Pair this with home and business electric vehicle charging and the obvious result is that the amount of electricity use in buildings is set to dramatically increase.

If we reduce building energy use by 20% in both the commercial and industrial sectors today, we could save more than $80 billion annually on utility bills. And according to the US Dept. of Energy Building Technologies Office, the on-site deployment of solar, battery, and energy management technologies to flex electricity demand to better meet supply will lead to between $100 and $200 billion in electricity cost savings. This is a significant saving when considering that the National Renewable Energy Lab Electrification Futures Study estimates that full electrification would increase US electricity system costs by at least $450 billion.

In short, if we want to keep energy bills down and temper electricity price increases, building energy efficiency and demand flexibility is a critical first step to electrification. Join us in conversation with Elizabeth Turner, founder of Precipitate Architecture, to explore strategies for building electrification and energy efficiency in the Upper Midwest.

Host: Nick Hylla, MREA Executive Director

Guest: Elizabeth Turner, Architect and Passive Building Consultant, Precipitate

0:20 – Nick introduces U.S. energy consumption

1:40 – Energy Efficiency’s role in cost savings for an electrified future

3:30 – Incentives for clean energy technologies

7:40 – Equity, Electrification, and Energy Efficiency

9:00 – Weatherization techniques

11:35 – Energy Efficient Building techniques

14:33 – Air source heat pumps and the preconditions needed

16:59 – Priorities and Challenges to Energy Efficiency

19:29 – Measuring energy efficiency

23:10 – Building code

26:27 – Energy Monitoring and management

27:20 – Federal legislation’s impact on energy efficiency

31:24 - State efforts to leverage IRA funds

35:05 – Energy efficiency’s value in the housing market

-Get Connected:

Precipitate Architecture: www.precipitatearch.com

The Energy Fair: www.theenergyfair.org

Midwest Renewable Energy Association: www.midwestrenew.org

Contact: Info@riseupmidwest.org

  continue reading

44 episodes

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