Evaluation of the energy performance and cost-benefit of innovative technologies in butcher’s shops

The CO2 emissions and energy use of SMEs in the tertiary sector (e.g. small food and non-food shops, restaurants, offices, pubs, etc.) are high and there are few initiatives to reduce because this target group is difficult to reach due to small scale and diversity. The Flemish-Dutch TERTS project wa...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lippens Jeroen, Lokere Saar, Barbary Wout, Breesch Hilde
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2021-01-01
Series:E3S Web of Conferences
Online Access:https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2021/22/e3sconf_hvac2021_05003.pdf
id doaj-ce0b94498b9f453e8fdc116927271df2
record_format Article
spelling doaj-ce0b94498b9f453e8fdc116927271df22021-04-06T13:49:55ZengEDP SciencesE3S Web of Conferences2267-12422021-01-012460500310.1051/e3sconf/202124605003e3sconf_hvac2021_05003Evaluation of the energy performance and cost-benefit of innovative technologies in butcher’s shopsLippens Jeroen0Lokere Saar1Barbary Wout2Breesch Hilde3KU Leuven, Department of Civil Engineering, Building Physics and Sustainable Design, Ghent Technology CampusKU Leuven, Department of Civil Engineering, Building Physics and Sustainable Design, Ghent Technology CampusKU Leuven, Department of Civil Engineering, Building Physics and Sustainable Design, Ghent Technology CampusKU Leuven, Department of Civil Engineering, Building Physics and Sustainable Design, Ghent Technology CampusThe CO2 emissions and energy use of SMEs in the tertiary sector (e.g. small food and non-food shops, restaurants, offices, pubs, etc.) are high and there are few initiatives to reduce because this target group is difficult to reach due to small scale and diversity. The Flemish-Dutch TERTS project wants (1) to make the sector aware of the potential of and (2) to demonstrate energy transition and energy efficiency of innovative technologies. This paper is focussing on butcher’s shops. A reference model is made based on data of 90 existing shops in Flanders (Belgium). The energy use of the building and systems is calculated according to DIN V 15 899. The cost-benefit of various measures is calculated and compared. Results show that the main energy consumers of a butcher shop are cooling, lighting and domestic hot water, whereas heating only has a rather small contribution. There are several cooling needs: product-cooling (in walk-in freezers, walk-in coolers and the cooling counter) and cooling of the workshop. The combination of the following measures is concluded to be the most favourable and leads to a reduction in final energy consumption of 60 %: a reflective coating on the flat roof and extra roof insulation, relighting with LED, air-to-water heat pump for the generation of domestic hot water and PV panels as local energy generation.https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2021/22/e3sconf_hvac2021_05003.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lippens Jeroen
Lokere Saar
Barbary Wout
Breesch Hilde
spellingShingle Lippens Jeroen
Lokere Saar
Barbary Wout
Breesch Hilde
Evaluation of the energy performance and cost-benefit of innovative technologies in butcher’s shops
E3S Web of Conferences
author_facet Lippens Jeroen
Lokere Saar
Barbary Wout
Breesch Hilde
author_sort Lippens Jeroen
title Evaluation of the energy performance and cost-benefit of innovative technologies in butcher’s shops
title_short Evaluation of the energy performance and cost-benefit of innovative technologies in butcher’s shops
title_full Evaluation of the energy performance and cost-benefit of innovative technologies in butcher’s shops
title_fullStr Evaluation of the energy performance and cost-benefit of innovative technologies in butcher’s shops
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of the energy performance and cost-benefit of innovative technologies in butcher’s shops
title_sort evaluation of the energy performance and cost-benefit of innovative technologies in butcher’s shops
publisher EDP Sciences
series E3S Web of Conferences
issn 2267-1242
publishDate 2021-01-01
description The CO2 emissions and energy use of SMEs in the tertiary sector (e.g. small food and non-food shops, restaurants, offices, pubs, etc.) are high and there are few initiatives to reduce because this target group is difficult to reach due to small scale and diversity. The Flemish-Dutch TERTS project wants (1) to make the sector aware of the potential of and (2) to demonstrate energy transition and energy efficiency of innovative technologies. This paper is focussing on butcher’s shops. A reference model is made based on data of 90 existing shops in Flanders (Belgium). The energy use of the building and systems is calculated according to DIN V 15 899. The cost-benefit of various measures is calculated and compared. Results show that the main energy consumers of a butcher shop are cooling, lighting and domestic hot water, whereas heating only has a rather small contribution. There are several cooling needs: product-cooling (in walk-in freezers, walk-in coolers and the cooling counter) and cooling of the workshop. The combination of the following measures is concluded to be the most favourable and leads to a reduction in final energy consumption of 60 %: a reflective coating on the flat roof and extra roof insulation, relighting with LED, air-to-water heat pump for the generation of domestic hot water and PV panels as local energy generation.
url https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2021/22/e3sconf_hvac2021_05003.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT lippensjeroen evaluationoftheenergyperformanceandcostbenefitofinnovativetechnologiesinbutchersshops
AT lokeresaar evaluationoftheenergyperformanceandcostbenefitofinnovativetechnologiesinbutchersshops
AT barbarywout evaluationoftheenergyperformanceandcostbenefitofinnovativetechnologiesinbutchersshops
AT breeschhilde evaluationoftheenergyperformanceandcostbenefitofinnovativetechnologiesinbutchersshops
_version_ 1721537932558336000