Efficient electric hot water heating technologies significantly reduce the carbon emissions of multifamily buildings, according to a report by the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy (ACEEE) and New Buildings Institute (NBI).
In multifamily buildings with five or more units, water heating uses more energy than space heating, cooling, or lighting, the report says. Converting gas-fired water heaters to advanced technology—electric heat pump water heaters (HPWHs)—would cut greenhouse gas emissions from water heating by an average of 58%.
If HPWHs are powered entirely by clean sources, they cause zero emissions, making them a critical tool for decarbonizing the economy. Efficient electric water heaters carry a higher upfront cost over gas models, so policymakers would have to provide incentives to owners to make the conversion, the report says.
“Many utilities offer incentives for building or unit owners to install in-unit heat pump hot water heaters,” an ACEEE/NBI news release says. “Yet few programs are designed specifically for multifamily buildings, which offer unique challenges.”
Related Stories
Codes and Standards | Nov 14, 2018
Obsolete safety standards may have been used in cleanup of former naval shipyard
San Francisco redevelopment site work may have been racked by fraud.
Codes and Standards | Nov 13, 2018
New York City’s new construction safety requirements are delayed
Some contractors say they weren’t ready for ‘massive initiative’.
Codes and Standards | Nov 9, 2018
Cities have multiple strategies to reduce parking requirements
Each community has to find its own mix of solutions.
Codes and Standards | Nov 8, 2018
Denver replaces green roof mandate with cool roof option
Less costly light-colored roofs can cut project costs by about 1.5%.
Codes and Standards | Nov 7, 2018
New report addresses sound transmission of wood-framed assemblies
AWC document provides empirical sound transmission model.
Codes and Standards | Nov 6, 2018
AIA releases 13 new and updated contract documents
Includes new Contractor-Subcontractor Master Agreement.
Codes and Standards | Nov 2, 2018
New Milwaukee Bucks home called world’s first bird-friendly sports arena
Design will make bird collisions less likely.
Codes and Standards | Nov 1, 2018
Several barriers holding back widespread construction of zero energy buildings
Code improvements and voluntary programs could add momentum.
Codes and Standards | Oct 31, 2018
Boston’s new flood protection plan centers on new parks
Initiative would add 67 acres of public open space.
Codes and Standards | Oct 30, 2018
San Francisco plans tougher seismic building codes
Recommendations include addressing geotechnical issues like those faced by Millennium Tower.