ASHRAE Hong Kong Chapter/ACRA Joint Technical Seminar
24 Mar 2015 (Tue)
ASHRAE Standards 189.1 and 90.1:
Green Building and Energy Efficiency
Dr. Sam C. M. Hui
Department of Mechanical Engineering
The University of Hong Kong
E-mail:
[email protected]Mar 2015
Contents
ASHRAE Standard 90.1
Structure and Scope
Compliance Options
Energy Cost Budget Method
Performance Rating Method
LEED Rating System
ASHRAE Standard 189.1
ASHRAE Standard 90.1
ASHRAE = American Society of Heating,
Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers
Global leader in the arts and sciences of heating,
ventilation, air conditioning and refrigeration
www.ashrae.org
Important ASHRAE Standards:
55: thermal comfort
62.1: indoor air quality
90.1: building energy conservation
135: BACnet (building automation & control)
189.1: high performance green buildings
ASHRAE Standard 90.1
ASHRAE Standard 90.1 (www.ashrae.org/standard901)
Energy Standard for Buildings Except Low-Rise
Residential Buildings
Include (new) commercial & institutional buildings
SSPC 90.1 Standing Standard Project Committee
Other relevant ASHRAE Standards:
90.2 -- for low-rise residential buildings
90.4 for data centers (coming soon)
100 -- for existing buildings
ASHRAE Standard 90.1
Why ASHRAE Standards 90.1 is important?
It is the reference standard for US Energy Policy
Act and many building energy codes in USA
It has been adopted in many countries as a model
for energy efficiency guidelines and codes
It is the professional standard of care set by
ASHRAE consensus, with support from
IES (Illuminating Engineering Society) or IESNA
ANSI (American National Standards Institute)
Required for LEED green building certification
ASHRAE Standard 90.1
US Energy Policy Act requires State codes to
meet or exceed 90.1 (different versions)
It becomes law when the States adopt it
Other codes or standards also refer to it, e.g.
International Energy Conservation Code (IECC)
NFPA 5000
Federal codes
State or local specific codes (e.g. California
Title24)
Building Energy Codes, e.g. ASHRAE 90.1, International Energy
Conservation Code (IECC), California Title 24
(Source: Mr. Kent W. Peterson, former ASHRAE President)
ASHRAE Standard 90.1
ASHRAE 90.1 timeline*:
90-1975: first issued
90A-1980: updated
90.1-1989: updated
90.1-1999: major rewrite
90.1-2001: minor revisions
90.1-2004: updates, reorganization
90.1-2007: updates
90.1-2010: updates
90.1-2013: expanded & updates
(*See also: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ASHRAE_90.1)
ASHRAE Standard 90.1
Different versions of ASHRAE 90.1
90-1975
Earliest version (in response to energy crisis)
90A-1980 (w/ 90B-1975 and 90C-1977)
Modified & included lighting procedure from IESNA
90.1-1989 and 1993 codified version of 1989
Significant change in envelope compliance
Towards a building energy performance standard
Upgrades in lighting and HVAC requirements
ASHRAE Standard 90.1
Different versions of ASHRAE 90.1 (contd)
90.1-1999/2001
Changes in format and technical content
Written in mandatory, enforceable language
Expanded climatic data to international locations
Both IP and SI units included
90.1-2004
Envelope and mechanical requirements expressed using
new climate zones
Lighting requirements more stringent by about 25%
Entire document has been reformatted
ASHRAE Standard 90.1
Different versions of ASHRAE 90.1 (contd)
90.1-2007
Incorporate 42 addenda
Further reduction in lighting power densities
Fan power limitation is based on either nameplate
horsepower, or system brake-horsepower
Fan pressure drop adjustment & VAV fan control
90.1-2010
Incorporate 60+ addenda, elevator was included
90.1-2013 (current)
Expand to new areas; holistic building design
ASHRAE Standard 90.1
ASHRAE 90.1-2013 (current version)
Goal: to achieve 30% energy savings compared to
90.1-2004 (may not be met for all buildings types
in all locations)
Standard 90.1 is on a 3-year cycle under a
continuous maintenance process
Ongoing changes through addenda
Consensus standard (open ANSI process)
Jointly sponsored by IES and ANSI
ASHRAE Standard 90.1
Related ASHRAE Standards
90.2-2007: for low-rise residential buildings
100-2006: energy conservation in existing buildings
105-2007: standard methods of measuring, expressing and
comparing building energy performance
140-2011: evaluation of building energy analysis computer
programs
169-2013: weather data for building design standards
55-2013: thermal comfort standard
62.1-2013: ventilation for acceptable indoor air quality
189.1-2011: high performance green buildings
ASHRAE 90.1 development process
Substantive
Changes
Committee
Proposes
Standard
Changes
Public
Review
and
Comment
Comment
Accepted
Committee
Approval
ASHRAE
Board of
Directors
Approval
Appeal of
Committee
upheld Approval denied
(Source: US Department of Energy)
ANSI
Approval
New
Standards
or Addenda
Published
Code compliance and the building process in USA
COMPLIANCE
Local
Government
Local
Code
Architects
Builders and
Engineers
Building
Energy Code
State
Government
Building
Construction
State
Code
Review Plans
Review products, materials
equipment specifications
Review tests, certification
reports, product listings
Inspect building and its
systems during construction
Evaluate materials
substituted in the field
Inspect prior to occupancy
(Source: US Department of Energy)
Save Energy
and Money
Reduce Carbon
Emissions
Structure and Scope
Structure of Standard 90.1-2013
1. Purpose
2. Scope
3. Definitions, Abbreviations, and Acronyms
4. Administration and Enforcement
5. Building Envelope
6. Heating, Ventilating, and Air Conditioning
7. Service Water Heating
Structure and Scope
Structure of Standard 90.1-2013 (contd)
8. Power
9. Lighting
10. Other Equipment
11. Energy Cost Budget Method
12. Normative References
Structure and Scope
Standard 90.1-2013 Normative Appendices
A Rated R-Value of Insulation and Assembly UFactor, C-Factor, and F-Factor Determinations
Building
envelope B Building Envelope Climate Criteria
C Methodology for Building Envelope TradeOff Option
D Climatic Data
E Informative References
F Addenda Description Information
G Performance Rating Method
Structure and Scope
Purpose: provide minimum requirements for
the energy-efficient design of buildings except
low-rise residential buildings
Not a design or advanced building guide
Separate advanced energy design guides were
developed by ASHRAE and other related bodies
Consensus standard (open ANSI process)
Jointly sponsored by IESNA and ANSI
* IESNA = Illuminating Engineering Society of North America (now IES)
ANSI = American National Standards Institute
Structure and Scope
Scope
New buildings and their systems
New portions of buildings and their systems
(additions)
New systems and equipment in existing buildings
(alterations), e.g. computer rooms
Exemptions, such as
Equipment and portions of building systems that
use energy primarily for industrial or
manufacturing purposes
Structure and Scope
Main areas of ASHRAE 90.1
1. Building Envelope
Roofs, walls, floors, slabs, doors, vertical glazing, skylights
2. HVAC Equipment and System
Cooling equipment efficiency, heating equipment efficiency,
supply fans, ventilation control, ducts
3. Lighting
Interiors electric lighting, controls, daylighting
4. Services Water Heating (SWH)
Equipment efficiency, pipe insulation
5. Power and Others
Motors, plug loads
ASHRAE 90.1 compliance approaches
Building System
Compliance Options
Prescriptive
Option
Envelope
HVAC
Mandatory
Provisions
SWH
(required for most
compliance options)
Power
Trade Off
Option
Energy Cost
Budget
Lighting
Other
(Source: US Department of Energy)
Simplified
Energy Code
Compliance
Exterior envelope and semi-exterior envelope
(Source: US Department of Energy)
Mandatory
Provisions
Prescriptive
Option
Trade-off Option
Energy Cost
Budget
Com pliance
Envelope compliance options in ASHRAE 90.1
Compliance Options
Building envelope prescriptive option:
Window-to-wall ratio (WWR) 40%, skylightroof ratio 5%
8 Criteria sets for different climate types
Insulation level, fenestration criteria
Building envelope trade-off option:
Envelope performance factor (EPF) of proposed
building EPF of budget building
ENVSTD and ComCheck software
US climate zones for building envelope prescriptive option
(Source: US Department of Energy)
HVAC compliance paths
(Source: US Department of Energy)
Compliance Options
HVAC simplified approach option:
Limited to small buildings (< 2,500 sq.m)
HVAC mandatory provisions:
Minimum equipment efficiency
Load calculations
Controls
HVAC system construction and insulation
Completion requirements
Examples of HVAC equipment efficiencies
Equipment type
Minimum efficiency
Self-contained, water-cooled
w/electric resistance heat
(20100 tons)
11.0 EER
10.3 IPLV
Water-source heat pump
(1.55.25 tons)
12.0 EER (cooling)
4.2 COP (heating)
Centrifugal chiller,
water-cooled ( 300 tons)
6.10 COP
0.576 kW/ton
6.40 IPLV
0.549 IPLV
(at ARI rating conditions)
6.4.1.1: Where multiple rating conditions or performance requirements
are provided, the equipment shall satisfy all stated requirements
(Source: Trane)
Mandatory HVAC provisions:
Zone thermostatic controls: perimeter zones
Building plan view: thermal zoning example
Z1
Z5
Core and each
long exposure
must be zoned
separately
Z4
Z2
Z3
40 m
(Source: Trane)
< 20 m
Treating these
exposures as a
single zone is
okay
Compliance Options
HVAC prescriptive path:
Economizers
Simultaneous heating and cooling limitation
Air system design and control
Hydronic system design and control
Heat rejection equipment
Energy recovery
Exhaust hoods, radiant heating systems
Hot gas bypass limitation
Air-side economizer cycle control (outdoor air enthalpy)
(Source: Honeywell, 1997. Engineering Manual of Automatic Control: for Commercial Buildings)
Water-side economizer (free refrigeration)
Head
Pressure
Control
Valve
Cooling
Tower
In
Evaporator
Out
Out
Condenser
In
Chiller
CWP
Economizer
Valve
Closes
In
Economizer
Mode
Primary
CHWP
Secondary
CHWP
With
Heat
Variable
ExchangerSpeed Drive
CWP
2-Way
Valve
Typical
Cooling
Coil
Cooling
Coil
With
Tertiary
Pump
(Source: 90.1 Users Manual)
CHWS CHWR
Lighting compliance requirements
Mandatory
Requirements
(Interior and
Exterior)
Interior
Lighting Power
Limits
Exterior
Lighting
Power Limits
Tradable
Total
Connected
Power
Controls
<
Interior
Lighting
Power
Allowance
Exemptions
NonTradable
Switching
Efficiency
Exemptions
Whole Building
OR
Space-by-Space
Additional Allowances
(Source: US Department of Energy)
Total
Connected
Power
<
Exterior
Lighting
Power
Allowance
Compliance Options
Interior lighting power
Two methods to determine the interior lighting
power allowance (ILPA):
1) Building area method
For whole building, grossed lighted area is
multiplied by allowance (more restrictive)
2) Space-by-space method
For projects with well-defined space types
Exemptions, e.g. video production, medical
Compliance Options
Interior lighting power (contd)
1) Building area method
One lighting power density per major building
function (e.g. office / parking garage /retail)
Average lighting power density (LPD) across
entire building function modeled for both
baseline and proposed case
No additional lighting power allowed
Compliance Options
Interior lighting power (contd)
2) Space-by-space method
One LPD per space function
Separate LPD modeled for each space or space
function in both Baseline and Proposed cases
Total wattage allowance = sum of individual space allowances
Individual space allowance = space area x LPD allowance
Trade-offs are allowed
Additional lighting power are allowed
Compliance Options
The ILPA is to be determined for:
The entire building OR
Separately metered or permitted portions of the
building
Tradeoffs between portions are NOT allowed if they
use different methods of calculation
Exterior lighting power
Lamp efficacy
Exterior lighting power wattage limits
Compliance Options
Service Water Heating
Prescriptive and energy cost budget
Mandatory provisions (Section 7.4)
Load calculations
Equipment efficiency
Service hot water piping insulation
System controls
Pools
Heat traps
Prescriptive path (Section 7.5)
Space heating and water heating
Service water heating equipment
Compliance Options
Power and Other Equipment
Max voltage drop allowed at design load
Feeder conductors
Branch circuit conductors
Motor efficiency levels correspond to Energy
Policy Acts manufacturing standards
Mandatory provisions are for General Purpose Design
A and Design B motors only
Motors in new buildings, additions to existing
buildings, and alterations to existing buildings must
comply
Energy Cost Budget Method
Energy Cost Budget (ECB) Method
The ultimate trade-off method to trade-off across
building systems through the use of annual, hourly
simulation tools and a baseline building
The only real way to deal with unique designs,
renewables, high-efficiency equipment, etc.
Buildings must still meet all mandatory
requirements
Basis of performance-based codes
Basic concept of Energy Cost Budget (ECB) Method
(Source: Hawaii building energy code)
Energy Cost Budget (ECB) Method in ASHRAE 90.1
Energy Cost Budget Method
Step 1: Verify compliance with the mandatory
provisions of Standard 90.1
Step 2: Determine which prescriptive requirements to
implement
Step 3: Model the proposed design in accordance
with Section 11.3 of Standard 90.1
Step 4: Model the budget design to determine the
annual energy cost budget
Step 5: Compare the annual energy costs of the two
models
Energy Cost Budget Method
Budget design (reference building)
Based on the proposed design, but changes all
Standard 90.1-governed design details to represent
minimum compliance, e.g.
Building envelope characteristics
Lighting power densities
Economizer type (if required)
Heat-recovery type (if required)
HVAC system type
Fan energy, cooling & heating equipment
Performance Rating Method
Performance Rating (PR) Method
Appendix G of Standard 90.1
Instructions for using the ASHRAE Standard 90.1
Energy Cost Budget Method in conjunction with
the LEED program
LEED = Leadership in Energy and Environmental
Design (developed by US Green Building Council)
ECB forms the basis of the energy portion of the
LEED rating
Performance Rating Method
From 90.1-2010, Appendix G becomes a
normative section (previously informative)
It incorporates Appendix G fully into the standard
making it subject to the same rigorous public
review process the rest of the standard undergoes
Using 90.1 as baseline for energy efficient and
green building programmes
Use performance rating method to calculate
energy savings; give credits to advanced design
strategies, more flexible than ECB method
Performance Rating Method
Understand the intent and limitations
Intended for rating only; not for code compliance
Provide a baseline for comparison & rating
Not to accurately predict actual energy use/costs
Factors affecting absolute accuracy:
Variations in occupancy
Variations in control and maintenance
Variations in weather
Changes in energy rates
Precision of the simulation software
Comparing the simulation requirements for ECB & PR methods
Energy Cost Budget Method
(from 90.1 Section 11 for EAp2)
Performance Rating Method
(from 90.1 Appendix G for EAc1)
Calculates at least 1,400 hours of building
operation to simulate annual energy use
Calculates 8,760 hours of building operation
to simulate annual energy use
Accounts for hourly variations (defined
separately for each day of the week and
holidays) in occupancy, lighting power,
miscellaneous equipment power, thermostat
setpoints, and HVAC operation
[Same]
Accounts for thermal mass effects
[Same]
Models 10 or more thermal zones
[Same]
Accounts for part-load performance of
mechanical equipment
[Same]
Includes capacity and efficiency corrections
for mechanical cooling & heating equipment
[Same]
Models airside and waterside economizers
with integrated control
Models airside economizers with integrated
control
Comparing the simulation requirements for ECB & PR methods (contd)
Energy Cost Budget Method
(from 90.1 Section 11 for EAp2)
Performance Rating Method
(from 90.1 Appendix G for EAc1)
Models budget building design characteristics Models baseline building design
per Section 11.5
characteristics per Section G3
Calculates design loads
[Same]
[Same]
Uses hourly weather data, such as
temperature and humidity, for the climate that
best represents the location of the proposed
design
Calculates annual energy costs using rates for
purchased energy approved by the adopting
authority; or, exports hourly reports of energy
use to a program that can
Calculates annual energy costs using either
actual rates for purchased energy or state
average energy prices published by DOEs
Energy Information Administration, http://
www.eia.doe.gov/; or exports hourly reports
of energy use to a program that can
Tested in accordance with ASHRAE Std 1402007, Standard Method of Test for the
Evaluation of Building Energy Analysis
Computer Programs
Includes calculation methodologies for the
building components being modeled
Performance Rating Method
Trade-off limits
Does not allow energy savings based on promises
about the future or measures made in the past
Savings must be based on real time conditions
Documentation requirements
Project summary & project overview
Energy efficiency features
Mandatory features
Prescriptive tradeoffs
Energy results
Performance Rating Method
The proposed building design should model:
All end-use loads
Any energy-saving strategies (e.g. daylighting and
natural ventilation), where applicable
Actual lighting power if the lighting system
already is designed, or the lighting power
allowance in accordance with Section 9 of 90.1
Energy-saving architectural features, e.g. light
shelves, overhangs, and other shading devices
Any undesigned systems as identical to the
baseline building design
(Source: EMSD)
(See http://www.beeo.emsd.gov.hk for details)
Proposed framework of the comprehensive BECs in Hong Kong
Compliance for the Proposed Design
Building Envelope
Lighting
HVAC
Electrical
Lift & Escalator
Basic
Requirements
Prescriptive
Approach
Building
Envelope
(Source: EMSD)
Lighting
HVAC
Performance
Approach
Electrical
Lift &
Escalator
Total Building Energy
Performance
Performance compliance for building energy code
Proposed Building Design
Basic requirements
must be met
Designed Building
Reference Building
Building
Description
Design Energy
Consumption
Total Energy
Budget
Building Energy
Analysis
Consumption
budget?
Performance
Comparison
Yes
Compliance with the building
energy code
Code
Compliance
Rating tools of building environmental performances around the world
(Adapted from CASBEE in Progress for Market Transformation in Japan, by Prof. Kazuo Iwamura, Tokyo City University)
LEED Rating System
LEED Green Building Rating System
Leadership in Energy & Environmental Design
By US Green Building Council
Current LEED systems:
New construction (LEED-NC) or Building design and
construction (BD+C)
Existing buildings operations & maintenance (LEEDEBOM) (O+M)
Commercial interiors (LEED-CI)
Core and shell (LEED-CS)
Homes, Schools, Healthcare, Retail
Neighborhood development (LEED-ND)
LEED Green Building Rating
(Source: USGBC http://www.usgbc.org/leed)
(Source: USGBC)
For LEED version 3
LEED 2009 New Construction Checklist
(Source: USGBC)
LEED Rating System
EAp2: Minimum energy performance
Intent: Establish the minimum level of energy
efficiency for the proposed building and systems
Requirements: Mandatory provisions of
ASHRAE 90.1 and
Prescriptive requirements of 90.1 or
Performance requirements of 90.1 Section 11 (Energy
Cost Budget Method) or
The requirements in the local energy code, whichever is
more stringent
LEED Rating System
EAc1: Optimize energy performance
Intent: Achieve increasing levels of energy
performance above the baseline in the prerequisite
standard to reduce environmental impacts
associated with excessive energy use
Requirements: Awards points for improving
performance rating of the design building vs.
baseline building as per ASHRAE Standard 90.1
(Appendix G) [1 to 19 points]
EAc1: Optimize energy performance
(Up to 19 points)
New Buildings
12%
14%
16%
18%
20%
22%
24%
26%
28%
30%
32%
34%
36%
38%
40%
42%
44%
46%
48%
Existing Building Renovations
8%
10%
12%
14%
16%
18%
20%
22%
24%
26%
28%
30%
32%
34%
36%
38%
40%
42%
44%
Points
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
LEED Rating System
Standards referenced by LEED, such as
ASHRAE Standards
90.1: Building energy conservation
62.1: Indoor air quality
55: Thermal comfort
52: Testing of air-cleaning devices
ANSI Standards (e.g. E779-03 for air leakage rate)
IESNA (lighting credits for ASHRAE 90.1)
ASTM Standards
U.S. Code of Federal Regulations (CFR)
(*ASHRAE = American Society of Heating, Refrigerating & Air-conditioning Engineers, Inc.)
ASHRAE Standard 189.1
New ASHRAE Standard 189.1: Design of
High-Performance Green Buildings
Developed by ASHRAE, USGBC and IESNA
A total building sustainability package
The first code-intended commercial green building
standard in USA
It covers key topic areas similar to LEED
Further information:
www.ashrae.org/greenstandard
ASHRAE Standard 189.1
What is Standard 189.1?
A standard developed in model code language
Provides minimum requirements for highperformance, green buildings
Applies to all buildings except low-rise residential
buildings (same as ASHRAE Standard 90.1)
Optional compliance path to the International
Green Construction Code (IgCC)
Not a design guide, not a rating system
ASHRAE Standard 189.1 Preview
www.ashrae.org/greenstandard
(Image source: ASHRAE)
ASHRAE Standard 189.1
It is jointly developed by:
ASHRAE (American Society of Heating,
Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers)
USGBC (U.S. Green Building Council)
IESNA (Illuminating Engineering Society of
North America)
It is also approved by American National
Standards Institute (ANSI)
ASHRAE Standard 189.1
Goals for Standard 189.1
Establish mandatory criteria in all topic areas
One challenge is existing green building rating
systems contain few mandatory provisions
Provide simple prescriptive compliance options
Provide flexible performance compliance options
Complement green building rating programs
Standard is not intended to compete with green building
rating programs (e.g. LEED)
Standard 189.1 building blocks
(Source: Mr. Kent W. Peterson)
Compliance paths of Standard 189.1
Mandatory
Prescriptive Path
(simple option, very few calculations)
Mandatory
Performance Path
(more options, but more effort)
(Source: Mr. Kent W. Peterson)
ASHRAE Standard 189.1
Standard 189.1 topic areas:
SS
Sustainable Sites
WE
Water Use Efficiency
EE
Energy Efficiency
IEQ
Indoor Environmental Quality
MR
Buildings Impact on the Atmosphere, Materials &
Resources
CO
Construction and Operations Plans
ASHRAE Standard 189.1
Sustainable Sites Highlights
SS
Site selection
Allowable sites (e.g. brownfield)
Prohibited development activity
Reduce heat island effect
Site hardscape
Wall and roof
Reduce light pollution
Outdoor lighting
Light trepass limits
ASHRAE Standard 189.1
Water Use Efficiency Highlights
WE
Site water use
Bio-diverse plantings, hydrozoning, and smart
irrigation controllers
Building water use
Plumbing fixtures & fittings, appliances, HVAC
systems & equipment
Cooling tower maximum cycles of concentration
HVAC Systems, equipment
Water consumption management
ASHRAE Standard 189.1
Energy Efficiency Highlights
EE
More stringent than Standard 90.1-2007
Equipment efficiency compliance
Includes plug/process loads
Electric peak load reduction
Renewable energy provisions
On-site renewable energy systems
Energy measurement for verification
Remote or automatic reading meters
ASHRAE Standard 189.1
Indoor Environmental Quality Highlights
IEQ
Indoor air quality
Ventilation rates per ASHRAE Standard 62.1
Outdoor air flow rate monitoring of min. outside air
MERV 8 filter (MERV 13 in PM2.5 non-attainment
areas)
No smoking inside building
Source contaminant control
Daylighting
Acoustical control
ASHRAE Standard 189.1
The Buildings Impact on the Atmosphere
MR Highlights
Construction waste management
Reduced impact materials
Wood products
Refrigerants (no CFC)
Storage and collection of recyclables and
discarded goods
ASHRAE Standard 189.1
Construction and Operation Highlights
CO
Acceptance testing / commissioning
IAQ construction management plan
Plans for Operation
High-performance building operation
Maintenance
Service life
Transportation management