Long-term impact of electrification and retrofits of the U.S residential building in diverse locations

  • Yizhi Yang
  • , Rosina Adhikari
  • , Yingli Lou
  • , James O'Donnell
  • , Neil Hewitt
  • , Wangda Zuo

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The U.S. buildings sector contributes 30% of operational carbon emissions, with residential buildings accounting for 56%. Reducing residential carbon emissions is crucial for achieving net-zero carbon goal. While many studies examine energy efficiency retrofit (EER) and electrification, few explore their long-term impacts across diverse climates and dynamic grid clean energy penetrations, as well as their economic effects on households. This study proposes a method to assess how EER and electrification affect long-term decarbonization and economics across different climates, focusing on carbon emissions, energy burden (the percentage of household income spent on energy), and payback period in four locations: Tampa, San Diego, Denver, and Great Falls. The study also introduces the concept of implicit energy burden by considering investment costs. Results show that while electrification can reduce long-term emissions with increased clean energy penetration, it may not always achieve decarbonization due to mismatches between clean energy availability and demand. In cooling-dominant locations, electrification lowers energy burden and peak demand, but in heating-dominant locations, it increases energy burden to 8.24%, raises peak demand by 632.78%, and shifts it from summer to winter. After integrating investment costs, the implicit energy burden can reach 8.35% in cold climates. For already highly electrified buildings in Denver and Great Falls, the payback period of EER measures can be shortened by up to 48.98%. The study highlights a tradeoff between decarbonization and energy burden alleviation, showing that while EER measures can reduce the energy burden, they only achieve one-quarter of the carbon emission reduction of electrification.

Original languageEnglish
Article number112472
JournalBuilding and Environment
Volume269
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Feb 2025
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Building energy model
  • Carbon emission reduction
  • Electrification
  • Energy burden
  • Energy efficiency measures

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Long-term impact of electrification and retrofits of the U.S residential building in diverse locations'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this