Energy renovations of EU multifamily buildings: do current policies target the real problems?
(2013) Rethink, renew, restart. eceee 2013 Summer Study- Abstract
- The Energy Performance of Buildings Directive (EPBD) and the Renewable Energy Directive (RED) require ambitious policies for existing buildings. One important aspect of policy design is to understand the decision making of building owners and investors. Governments can support such decisions with grants, but public funds can only cover part of the investments. Hence, schemes need to be well-designed to stimulate the market and support sustainable market transformation. However, funding is not the only issue and there are other structural barriers. This is particularly the case for owner-occupied multifamily housing, where the governance and dynamics of collective decisions are major barriers to energy renovations.
Our paper... (More) - The Energy Performance of Buildings Directive (EPBD) and the Renewable Energy Directive (RED) require ambitious policies for existing buildings. One important aspect of policy design is to understand the decision making of building owners and investors. Governments can support such decisions with grants, but public funds can only cover part of the investments. Hence, schemes need to be well-designed to stimulate the market and support sustainable market transformation. However, funding is not the only issue and there are other structural barriers. This is particularly the case for owner-occupied multifamily housing, where the governance and dynamics of collective decisions are major barriers to energy renovations.
Our paper focuses on decision making on energy investments in owner-occupied multifamily housing (condominiums) in Europe. Condominium-type ownership is the dominant form of ownership of apartment buildings in most New Member States. It is also dominant in Southern Europe and widespread in other countries (Austria, Finland). We build on work done in the IEE project ENTRANZE (www.entranze.eu), which develops policy recommendations for increasing the number of near-zero energy renovations. Our data include a comprehensive review of the structures of decision making in nine European countries, expert interviews, and detailed analysis of the drivers and barriers of energy investments. We highlight similarities among countries, along with significant differences. These differences are further explored via 3 country studies on the legal, institutional, financial and social aspects of energy investments in condominiums. Finally, we assess the overall relevance of these barriers in selected EU Member States by combining the investigation of barriers with quantitative data on the structure of the building stock, the share of condominiums and related governance structures in different countries. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/4279415
- author
- Matschoss, Kaisa ; Heiskanen, Eva LU ; Atanasiu, Bogdan and Kranzl, Lukas
- organization
- publishing date
- 2013
- type
- Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- building refurbishment, market transformation, residential buildings, investment, policy-mix, actors, condominiums, social dynamics
- host publication
- Rethink, renew, restart. Proceedings of the eceee 2013 Summer Study
- publisher
- Berg Publishers
- conference name
- Rethink, renew, restart. eceee 2013 Summer Study
- conference dates
- 0001-01-02
- ISBN
- 978-91-980482-2-3
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 36d59486-52af-461e-b22b-c85ac1512359 (old id 4279415)
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-04 11:37:28
- date last changed
- 2018-11-21 21:06:05
@inproceedings{36d59486-52af-461e-b22b-c85ac1512359, abstract = {{The Energy Performance of Buildings Directive (EPBD) and the Renewable Energy Directive (RED) require ambitious policies for existing buildings. One important aspect of policy design is to understand the decision making of building owners and investors. Governments can support such decisions with grants, but public funds can only cover part of the investments. Hence, schemes need to be well-designed to stimulate the market and support sustainable market transformation. However, funding is not the only issue and there are other structural barriers. This is particularly the case for owner-occupied multifamily housing, where the governance and dynamics of collective decisions are major barriers to energy renovations. <br/><br> Our paper focuses on decision making on energy investments in owner-occupied multifamily housing (condominiums) in Europe. Condominium-type ownership is the dominant form of ownership of apartment buildings in most New Member States. It is also dominant in Southern Europe and widespread in other countries (Austria, Finland). We build on work done in the IEE project ENTRANZE (www.entranze.eu), which develops policy recommendations for increasing the number of near-zero energy renovations. Our data include a comprehensive review of the structures of decision making in nine European countries, expert interviews, and detailed analysis of the drivers and barriers of energy investments. We highlight similarities among countries, along with significant differences. These differences are further explored via 3 country studies on the legal, institutional, financial and social aspects of energy investments in condominiums. Finally, we assess the overall relevance of these barriers in selected EU Member States by combining the investigation of barriers with quantitative data on the structure of the building stock, the share of condominiums and related governance structures in different countries.}}, author = {{Matschoss, Kaisa and Heiskanen, Eva and Atanasiu, Bogdan and Kranzl, Lukas}}, booktitle = {{Rethink, renew, restart. Proceedings of the eceee 2013 Summer Study}}, isbn = {{978-91-980482-2-3}}, keywords = {{building refurbishment; market transformation; residential buildings; investment; policy-mix; actors; condominiums; social dynamics}}, language = {{eng}}, publisher = {{Berg Publishers}}, title = {{Energy renovations of EU multifamily buildings: do current policies target the real problems?}}, year = {{2013}}, }