States must now certify that their building
codes meet the requirements in ASHRAE/IESNA’s 2004 energy efficiency standard,
under a ruling issued by the United States Department of Energy (DOE) that
finds the standard saves more energy than an earlier version.
ANSI/ASHRAE/IESNA Standard
90.1-2004,
Energy Standard for Buildings Except Low-Rise Residential
Buildings, has been established by the DOE as the commercial building
reference standard for state building energy codes under the federal Energy
Policy Act.
The Act requires all states
to certify that they have state energy codes in place that are at least as
stringent as 90.1-2004, or justify why they cannot comply. The DOE determined
that Standard 90.1-2004 saves more energy than Standard 90.1- 1999, which was
the previously referenced standard in the Act.
“The quantitative analysis
of the energy consumption of buildings built to Standard 90.1-2004, as compared
with buildings built to Standard 90.1-1999, indicates national source energy
savings of approximately 13.9 percent of commercial building energy
consumption. Site energy savings are estimated to be approximately 11.9
percent,” according to the ruling published in The Federal Register on Dec. 30,
2008.
“ASHRAE is committed to
continually improving building energy performance, so we are pleased with this
recognition that the 2004 standard saves more energy,” ASHRAE President Bill
Harrison said. “ASHRAE is currently working on the 2010 version of Standard
90.1 with a goal of achieving 30 percent energy savings compared to 90.1-2004
as part of our target to achieve market-viable net-zero-energy buildings by
2015.”
“The Illuminating
Engineering Society is pleased to receive the DOE’s positive determination on
the site and source energy savings achieved by ANSI/ASHRAE/IES Standard
90.1-2004 compared to the 1999 standard,” said
Rita Harrold, IES director of technology. She also expressed the
Society’s appreciation for the contributions of the committee members
responsible for developing the standard, which help further the goals of the
sponsoring organizations, and for the diligence of the DOE in conducting the
determination.
The DOE noted that the newer
version of the standard contained 13 positive impacts on energy efficiency.
These impacts included changes made through the public review process in which
users of the standard comment and offer guidance on proposed requirements to
the standard. The positive impacts include:
-
Removed explicit allowance for supply air into non-occupied isolation areas.
- Limitations of
the use of dampers in closed circuit cooling towers in place of water bypass
valves and piping.
- Additions of
insulation requirements for buried ductwork.
- Mapping of
envelope requirements to new climate zones, which led to increased stringency
of envelope requirements.
- Mapping of
economizer requirements to new climate zones, which led to greater geographic
expansion of economizer requirements.
- Addition of
requirements for ventilation fan controls.
- Lowered size
range for part-load fan power limitation.
- Addition of
requirements for heat pump pool heaters.
- Complete
replacement of interior lighting power density allowances.
- Revised exterior
lighting power density allowances.
- Addition of occupancy
sensor requirements for classrooms, meeting, and lunch rooms.
- Lower retail
sales lighting power allowance.
- New exit sign
wattage requirement.
In addition, ASHRAE is
working on providing more stringent energy guidance in a proposed standard for
high-performance buildings. Being developed in partnership with IESNA and the
U.S. Green Building Council, Standard 189.1,
Standard for the Design
of High-Performance Green Buildings Except Low-Rise Residential Buildings,
will provide minimum requirements for the design of high-performance new
commercial buildings and major renovation projects, addressing energy
efficiency, a building’s impact on the atmosphere, sustainable sites, water use
efficiency, materials and resources, and indoor environmental quality.
Since being developed in response to the energy crisis
in the 1970s, Standard 90.1 now influences building designs worldwide. It has
become the basis for building codes, and the standard for building design and construction
throughout the United States. ASHRAE publishes a revised version of the
standard every three years. The 2007 version of Standard 90.1 was released last
year.