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Estimating building cooling energy demand through the Cooling Degree Hours in a changing climate: A modeling study

TitoloEstimating building cooling energy demand through the Cooling Degree Hours in a changing climate: A modeling study
Tipo di pubblicazioneArticolo su Rivista peer-reviewed
Anno di Pubblicazione2022
AutoriSalata, Ferdinando, Falasca Serena, Ciancio Virgilio, Curci Gabriele, Grignaffini Stefano, and de Wilde Pieter
RivistaSustainable Cities and Society
Volume76
Type of ArticleArticle
Parole chiavebuilding, Building cooling, Climate change, cooling, Cooling (heating) degree hour, Cooling energy, Cooling systems, demand-side management, Energy demands, Energy management, Energy needs, energy use, Infographic, Infographic map, Italy, Mediterranean areas, Mediterranean region, summer, Summer energy demand, Weather forecasting, WRF
Abstract

The increasingly hot and long summers due to the climate change will cause a significant increase in energy demand for cooling systems, especially in highly-densely populated regions. The cooling energy needs of buildings are proportional to the Cooling Degree Hours, which consist in the cumulative sum of the positive differences between the hourly outdoor temperature and the indoor comfort temperature. In this work, this quantity is computed using gridded temperatures predicted by the Weather Research and Forecasting model for the years 2000, 2019, 2050 and 2080 across Italy. This allows investigating the evolution of the cooling energy needs on a national scale, following the climate-change related trend of the ambient temperature. For climate projections, an intermediate (RCP4.5) and a high emissions (RCP8.5) scenario defined by the Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change have been considered. Findings show that results of 2050-RCP8.5 and 2080-RCP4.5 are very close, both in terms of amount of operational hours and cooling degree hours. The maximum level of cooling degree hours has increased more in the recent past than it will grow in the future, even according to RCP8.5. Yet in 2080 about 70% of Italy will reach levels of cooling degree hours not touched in 2000. © 2021 Elsevier Ltd

Note

Cited by: 43

URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85120997684&doi=10.1016%2fj.scs.2021.103518&partnerID=40&md5=b6b5e86cf3263df087fa7b4a362026e4
DOI10.1016/j.scs.2021.103518
Citation KeySalata2022