TY - JOUR
T1 - Mining households’ energy data to disclose fuel poverty: Lessons for Southern Europe
AU - Gouveia, João Pedro
AU - Seixas, Júlia
AU - Long, Gavin
N1 - The research leading to these results has received funding from EU project INSMART, Integrative Smart City Planning [grant agreement no.: 314164] and by Portuguese Science and Technology Foundation (FCT) [scholarship SFRH/BD/70177/2011]. The authors want to thank the INSMART project members for their contributions to the household surveys collection, smart meters' data and buildings energy simulation. The authors are also grateful for the valuable comments and suggestions on the manuscript from the anonymous reviewers.
PY - 2018/3/20
Y1 - 2018/3/20
N2 - Fuel poverty is a recognized and increasing problem in several European countries. A growing body of literature covers this topic, but dedicated analysis for Portugal are scarce despite the high perception of this condition. This paper contributes to fill this knowledge gap focusing on a European southern city while bringing new datasets and analysis to the assessment of this topic; consumer groups identification and to policy discussion. Daily electricity smart meters’ registries were combined with socio-economic data, collected from door-to-door surveys, to understand the extent and the determinants of energy consumption for two contrasting consumer groups (herein called fuel poverty and fuel obesity groups). The analysis is based on the amount and annual profile of electricity consumption and was complemented with building energy simulations for relevant building typologies in those groups, to identify heating and cooling thermal performance gaps. The existence of these gaps allowed confirming and/or discarding the initial hypothesis of the poverty or obesity conditions. Results disclose socio-economic variables, as income, and consumers’ behavior as key determinants of electricity consumption. It was identified a severe lack of thermal comfort levels inside households of both groups, either in cooling (98% for fuel poverty and 87% for fuel obesity) and heating seasons (98% for fuel poverty and 94% for fuel obesity). Major conclusion refers that electricity consumption cannot be used alone to segment consumer groups. This assessment may serve to support energy policy measures and instruments targeted to different consumers’ groups. For example, distinct campaigns and differentiated incentives may apply to achieve energy efficiency and reduction while keep or improve indoor comfort levels.
AB - Fuel poverty is a recognized and increasing problem in several European countries. A growing body of literature covers this topic, but dedicated analysis for Portugal are scarce despite the high perception of this condition. This paper contributes to fill this knowledge gap focusing on a European southern city while bringing new datasets and analysis to the assessment of this topic; consumer groups identification and to policy discussion. Daily electricity smart meters’ registries were combined with socio-economic data, collected from door-to-door surveys, to understand the extent and the determinants of energy consumption for two contrasting consumer groups (herein called fuel poverty and fuel obesity groups). The analysis is based on the amount and annual profile of electricity consumption and was complemented with building energy simulations for relevant building typologies in those groups, to identify heating and cooling thermal performance gaps. The existence of these gaps allowed confirming and/or discarding the initial hypothesis of the poverty or obesity conditions. Results disclose socio-economic variables, as income, and consumers’ behavior as key determinants of electricity consumption. It was identified a severe lack of thermal comfort levels inside households of both groups, either in cooling (98% for fuel poverty and 87% for fuel obesity) and heating seasons (98% for fuel poverty and 94% for fuel obesity). Major conclusion refers that electricity consumption cannot be used alone to segment consumer groups. This assessment may serve to support energy policy measures and instruments targeted to different consumers’ groups. For example, distinct campaigns and differentiated incentives may apply to achieve energy efficiency and reduction while keep or improve indoor comfort levels.
KW - Buildings energy simulation
KW - Fuel obesity
KW - Fuel poverty
KW - Smart meters
KW - Surveys
KW - Thermal comfort
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85041855377&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.jclepro.2018.01.021
DO - 10.1016/j.jclepro.2018.01.021
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85041855377
VL - 178
SP - 534
EP - 550
JO - Journal of Cleaner Production
JF - Journal of Cleaner Production
SN - 0959-6526
ER -