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Adopting Space Sufficiency Interventions as a Means for Accelerating Energy Renovation : Swedish Homeowners' Perspective

Sula, Migena ; Mahapatra, Krushna ; Mainali, Brijesh ; Rupar Gadd, Katarina and Pardalis, Georgios LU (2023) Sustainable Built Environment and Urban Transition
Abstract
Residential energy consumption remains a significant driver of CO2 emissions in European buildings, demanding urgent action in the face of the climate crisis. While prevailing efforts have predominantly concentrated on enhancing energy efficiency and integrating renewable sources, addressing the climate urgency and resource constraints necessitates a paradigm shift towards sufficiency principles. Swedish statistics on Single-Family Houses (SFH) show that more than a third of households inhabit oversized spaces in aging buildings needing renovation. Sufficiency-oriented renovation strategies—optimizing, or reducing living areas per capita— present a promising avenue to achieve substantial energy reductions. This approach also... (More)
Residential energy consumption remains a significant driver of CO2 emissions in European buildings, demanding urgent action in the face of the climate crisis. While prevailing efforts have predominantly concentrated on enhancing energy efficiency and integrating renewable sources, addressing the climate urgency and resource constraints necessitates a paradigm shift towards sufficiency principles. Swedish statistics on Single-Family Houses (SFH) show that more than a third of households inhabit oversized spaces in aging buildings needing renovation. Sufficiency-oriented renovation strategies—optimizing, or reducing living areas per capita— present a promising avenue to achieve substantial energy reductions. This approach also opens the potential for space rentals, yielding combined energy and space efficiency advantages. In addition, the literature highlights reduced maintenance costs and potential urban housing crisis mitigation. However, practical implementation faces multiple obstacles.This paper investigates SFH owners' attitudes towards space-sufficiency interventions, focusing on living size preferences and identifying barriers and opportunities for sustainable housing. Through focus group sessions with SFH owners in November-December 2022, qualitative content analysis revealed that reducing living space per capita faces multifaceted challenges, despite potential benefits.These challenges encompass not only personal and psychological considerations but extend to economic, infrastructural, and policy barriers, including issues such as the potential breach of privacy, disruptions due to noise, dilemmas related to ownership and independency, disruptions to work-life dynamics, inadequate familiarity with sufficiency principles, and uncertainty imposed by space constraints. Strategic integration of sufficiency principles into energy-renovation policy alternatives necessitates a holistic approach that addresses these barriers, and some form of incentives may be needed to catalyze the adoption of sufficiency principles effectively. (Less)
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author
; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
keywords
climate adaptation and mitigation, Sustainable housing, energy renovaitons
host publication
Proceedings of the International Conference “Sustainable Built Environment and Urban Transition”
conference name
Sustainable Built Environment and Urban Transition
conference location
Växjö
conference dates
2023-10-12 - 2023-10-13
ISBN
978-91-8082-042-4
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
89197067-cec2-4fb8-868a-06215d8f72bf
alternative location
https://open.lnu.se/index.php/sbut/article/view/3847/3499
date added to LUP
2023-10-15 22:11:42
date last changed
2023-10-17 15:31:17
@inproceedings{89197067-cec2-4fb8-868a-06215d8f72bf,
  abstract     = {{Residential energy consumption remains a significant driver of CO2 emissions in European buildings, demanding urgent action in the face of the climate crisis. While prevailing efforts have predominantly concentrated on enhancing energy efficiency and integrating renewable sources, addressing the climate urgency and resource constraints necessitates a paradigm shift towards sufficiency principles.  Swedish statistics on Single-Family Houses (SFH) show that more than a third of households inhabit oversized spaces in aging buildings needing renovation. Sufficiency-oriented renovation strategies—optimizing,  or  reducing  living  areas  per  capita— present  a  promising  avenue  to  achieve  substantial  energy reductions. This approach also opens the potential for space rentals, yielding combined energy and space efficiency advantages. In addition, the literature highlights reduced maintenance costs and potential urban housing crisis mitigation. However, practical implementation faces multiple obstacles.This paper  investigates  SFH  owners'  attitudes  towards  space-sufficiency  interventions,  focusing  on living  size  preferences  and  identifying  barriers  and  opportunities  for  sustainable  housing.  Through focus  group  sessions  with  SFH  owners  in  November-December  2022,  qualitative  content  analysis  revealed that reducing living space per capita faces multifaceted challenges, despite potential benefits.These challenges encompass  not  only  personal  and  psychological  considerations  but  extend  to  economic, infrastructural, and policy barriers, including issues such as the potential breach of privacy, disruptions  due  to  noise,  dilemmas  related  to  ownership  and  independency,  disruptions  to  work-life dynamics,  inadequate  familiarity  with  sufficiency  principles,  and  uncertainty  imposed  by  space constraints.  Strategic integration of sufficiency principles into energy-renovation policy alternatives necessitates  a  holistic  approach  that  addresses  these  barriers,  and  some  form  of  incentives may  be  needed to catalyze the adoption of sufficiency principles effectively.}},
  author       = {{Sula, Migena and Mahapatra, Krushna and Mainali, Brijesh and Rupar Gadd, Katarina and Pardalis, Georgios}},
  booktitle    = {{Proceedings of the International Conference “Sustainable Built Environment and Urban Transition”}},
  isbn         = {{978-91-8082-042-4}},
  keywords     = {{climate adaptation and mitigation; Sustainable housing; energy renovaitons}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  title        = {{Adopting Space Sufficiency Interventions as a Means for Accelerating Energy Renovation : Swedish Homeowners' Perspective}},
  url          = {{https://open.lnu.se/index.php/sbut/article/view/3847/3499}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}