Many of us have made the swap to more sustainable lighting and equipment in and around our homes and places of work, but building fabric is a major contributor to how efficient a building will be.
If we maximise the orientation of a building to gain natural daylight, concentrate on a building’s form so we have compact shapes that themselves retain energy rather than shed it freely, and build in high levels of insulation and air tightness, this will give us a very efficient starting point and minimise energy consumption.
This really is the best way to spend money on developing buildings fit for the 2050 targets. These will give the longest-term gains and really should be everyone’s default going forward so any future upgrades to meet the 2050 targets can be as easily managed and incorporated as possible.
2. They have considered where they'll get the energy they need: generating their own or purchasing energy from new renewable energy suppliers.
Now that the most efficient building envelope and fabric has been considered, it’s time to think seriously about the equipment required to create a pleasant internal environment.
If we can generate our own energy to run simple M&E systems, such as PVs or heat pumps, then that is really being self-sufficient, but we can buy top-up energy in from renewable energy sourcing companies. This really sets customers on the way to achieving those net-zero carbon in operation targets.
3. They have stopped using fossil fuels.
The use of gas boilers is still commonplace but we have to step away from burning fossil fuels in buildings as these produce large volumes of carbon and this just isn’t compatible with net-zero carbon in operation buildings.
The barrier to doing this is that gas is cheap right now compared to electricity. However, it's widely expected that carbon taxes and disincentives to use fossil fuels are not far away, so the cross over point between what is the most economical energy source per kWh is likely to shift.
Designing buildings to be ‘net-zero ready’ means having a building that is ready to swap out gas as the primary source of energy and being ready to swap in electric as those energy prices crossover. Having an efficient building and one that generates some of its own power and having systems that are going to work with the different energy production systems is what we call being net-zero ready.