Analysis on the Insulation Improvements in Dutch Houses
J.J. Alpizar Castillo (TU Delft - Energy Management)
L.M. Ramirez Elizondo (TU Delft - DC systems, Energy conversion & Storage)
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Abstract
Thermal comfort accounts for significant residential energy consumption in high latitudes; however, quantitative information about insulation improvements is not widely available. First, we performed a study to quantify the effects of improving the insulation in walls, roofs, and windows of typical dwellings in the Netherlands (a studio, an apartment, and a stand-alone house). Our results indicate that improving from single- to double-glazing is the most significant change, reducing gas consumption up to 50%, whereas the difference between double- and triple-glazing is less than 7%. Improving the roof insulation, filling cavity walls with insulation, or adding external wall insulation did not show attractive business cases, as the payback time was too high. Second, we evaluated upgrading the dwelling energy label by improving the insulation or adding a PV system and a heat pump. The results showed that, for energy labels C or above, the insulation reached a saturation point where it is not attractive to improve it before its end-of-life proactively. Instead, investing in the energy system by adding a PV system and a heat pump has better payback times. Our results allow policymakers and project developers to focus on the most relevant changes to accelerate the energy transition.