Building energy retrofit-as-a-service: a Total Value of Ownership assessment methodology to support whole life-cycle building circularity and decarbonisation

Construction Management and Economics

Journal Article (2022)
Author(s)

J.F. Azcarate-Aguerre (TU Delft - Building Product Innovation)

Mira Conci (EIT Climate-KIC)

Markus Zils (University of Exeter)

Peter Hopkinson (University of Exeter)

T. Klein (TU Delft - Building Product Innovation)

Research Group
Building Product Innovation
Copyright
© 2022 J.F. Azcarate Aguerre, Mira Conci, Markus Zils, Peter Hopkinson, T. Klein
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1080/01446193.2022.2094434
More Info
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Publication Year
2022
Language
English
Copyright
© 2022 J.F. Azcarate Aguerre, Mira Conci, Markus Zils, Peter Hopkinson, T. Klein
Research Group
Building Product Innovation
Issue number
9
Volume number
40
Pages (from-to)
676-689
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Abstract

The regulatory drive to accelerate the clean energy and circular economy transitions in the European building stock is currently failing to overcome systemic implementation barriers. These barriers include high initial investment costs, misaligned financial incentives among stakeholders, and the relatively low cost of less sustainable energy and materials. A Product-Service Systems (PSS) approach could successfully overcome many of these barriers by (1) outsourcing capital investment, as well as financial and technical risks, (2) providing shared economic incentives to collaborating stakeholders, and (3) retaining extended producer responsibility and ownership over materials and products. However, PSS is still not seen as a viable business model when compared to both a standard “ownership” contract and a “no-retrofit” scenario. This paper proposes a Total Value of Ownership (TVO) method to evaluate the financial performance of a building energy retrofit in terms of Net Present Value, comparing a matrix of scenarios. Results show that – when accounting for capital and opportunity costs tied to alternative investments, internalising externalities, and monetising soft values such as user productivity and property value – a PSS model can deliver the highest NPV. Furthermore, results show that a PSS alternative can act as a positive future-proofing strategy to safeguard the building owner’s position in the face of uncertain future market indicators and carbon taxation. Recommendations for policymakers, investors, financiers, building owners, and end-users are presented to identify the economic value of PSS contracts, leading to better-informed decisions which can accelerate deep energy retrofit of the building stock.