Intro to duall
Transcript of Intro to duall
DUALLdeliberative approach to the living lab
Dr Richard Bull and team.01/07/10
Introductions
Background: Living Lab & DUALL
Why is ICT a problem? The environmental challenge
Group discussion
Next steps
QUEENS BUILDING 1995-2010
• At heart of DMU campus• Houses
– Faculty of Technology– Institute of Energy and Sustainable
Development• Green Building of the Year 1995• RIBA Award 1995• Europe's largest naturally
ventilated building (at the time) • The entire building is naturally
ventilated, passively cooled and naturally lit
• Poor energy rating- D• CHP never worked
Gross Floor Area:110,000 ft²Construction Period: November 1991 -August 1993Total Project Cost:£9.7 million sterling
THE LIVING LABVISION
•A world class iconic centre of a sustainable building.
•A visible statement of DMU’s commitment to sustainable development.
•Achieved through applied research, user engagement and innovative partnerships.
DUALL• 12 month research project funded by JISC’s
Greening ICT programme• Aims : To understand the role of ICT in reducing
energy consumption of a large scale public building through the design of an ICT interface connecting building users to their electricity consumption.
• Baseline evaluation• Deliberation (Public engagement) & community of
practice• On-line tools – website/writetoreply
OBJECTIVES
• To design and test an ICT tool connecting building users to their energy consumption.
• To engage in an innovative, deliberative upstream approach in the design of the application.
• To understand the extent to which building users can impact the performance of the environment they are in.
• To what extent is this contribution, given claims that smart buildings, which use ICT to monitor and manage this consumption, have the potential to reduce utilities consumption by 10–20%.
• To contribute to the Living Lab• To understand the impact of ICT interfaces on user-behaviour.
Bas
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BASELINE EVALUATION (2) – ENERGY CONSUMPTION
Baseline Evaluation (2)
Joss [email protected]://joss.blogs.lincoln.ac.uk
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The environmental challenge:Energy, Efficiency and Emissions
Energy, Environment, Economy
There is a strong correlation between energy use and GDP. Global energy demand is on the rise yet oil supply is forecast to decline in the next few years. There is no precedent for oil discoveries to make up for the shortfall, nor is there a precedent for efficiencies to relieve demand on this scale. Public sector debt is a burden that ultimately requires economic growth to pay it off. Energy supply looks likely to constrain growth.
Global emissions currently exceed the IPCC 'marker' scenario range. The Climate Change Act 2008 has made the -80%/2050 target law, yet this requires a national mobilisation akin to war-time. Probably impossible but could radically change the direction of HE in terms of skills required and spending available.
I = P x A x TThe impact of human activities (I) is determined by the overall
population (P), the level of affluence (A) and the level of technology (T).
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Even as the efficiency of technology improves, affluence and population scale up the impacts.
Technology as an efficiency factor?
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Where did the efficiencies go? Population rise and economic growth
We are energy efficient!
“Energy efficiency improvement was an important phenomenon in the global energy balance over the past 30 years. Without energy efficiency improvements, the OECD nations would have used approximately 49% more energy than was actually consumed as of 1998.”
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Small print: Nevertheless, OECD energy use continues to rise. In 2000 it was 39% higher than in 1973.
More fuel use
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More emissions
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Kidding ourselves about consumption...?
The UK reported a 15% decrease in emissions from 1990-2005.
However, UK emissions increased by around 19% when emissions from aviation, overseas trade, shipping and tourism were accounted for.
“The UK’s environmental impact is as significant from the resources exploited to produce its imports as from the domestic resources it consumes. It mandates counting emissions on a consumption basis.” (Dieter Helm 2007)
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“From 2000 to 2006 UK energy efficiency increased by about 2% per year... Because the effects of technological change (including changes in the economy toward services and away from energy intensive industry) just about balanced the overall growth of the economy for the past decade, the UK has seen little growth in its overall carbon dioxide emissions.” (Pielke 2009)
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Economy wide rebound effect
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1. by the same consumer for the same product or service;
2. by the same consumer for a different product or service;
3. by a different consumer for the same product or service;
4. by a different consumer for a different product or service.
5. No rebound. Increase leisure, work less, reduce purchasing power.
‘Rebound demands’
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“If our parents doubled their income, or doubled the use of iron, or doubled the agricultural produce of the country, then so ought we, unless we are changed either in character or circumstances.” – Jevons 1865
‘Rebound’ is not new
WHY IS IT A PROBLEM• It is estimated that ICT accounts for 2% of global carbon dioxide
emissions, and that its use in UK further and higher education generates over 500,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions per year
• The UK government has a target to reduce carbon dioxide emissions by 26% from 1990 levels by 2020
• Personal computing (PCs, laptops, monitors) is the main area of ICT-related energy consumption in UK universities and colleges, at 40–50% of the total, and digital printing is a further 10–16%*
• The overall energy use is growing at a much faster rate than technological development and deployment can offset
*JISC Susteit Report 2009
QUESTIONS
DISCUSSION: THE ROLE OF INFORMATION IN CHANGING
BEHAVIOUR
1. Would you like to know the consumption of your own ICT equipment?
2. Would you like to know the consumption of your team/department’s ICT equipment?
3. How would you like it presented?– £s Kwhs, CO2, text alerts, emails, phone app, web
based, etc etc
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THE NEXT STEPS
• Future meetings (July 8th – Sept?)• Writetoreply• http://duall.dmu.ac.uk/• Sub-metering• Produce recommendations for the
design of an ‘app’