Authors
Ray Galvin
Publication date
2024/1/1
Journal
Energy Policy
Volume
184
Pages
113905
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Germany has ambitious goals to steeply increase the thermal energy efficiency of its older residential buildings, to reduce CO2 emissions and bring heating costs down, especially for low-income households who are over-represented in such dwellings. However, existing scholarship suggests it is doubtful whether the costs of renovation are offset by energy cost savings, even when renovating to only the most basic energy-efficiency standard. Renovating to more ambitious standards further increases the gap between costs and savings. This study offers a first attempt to quantify the dimensions of the problem and what it means for financing this ambitious goal. It analyses publicly available data on case studies of three of Germany's typical 1940s-1970s-era multi-apartment building types and three typical 1900s–1970s house types, retrofitted to a range of energy-efficiency standards in 2020–2021. It updates these for …
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