The impact of weather variation on energy consumption in residential houses.

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Fikru, Mahelet G.
Gautier, Luis

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Elsevier

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This paper studies the impact of weather variation on energy use by using 5-minutes interval weather–energy data obtained from two residential houses: house 1 is a conventional house with advanced efficiency features and house 2 is a net-zero solar house with relatively more advanced efficiency features. Our result suggests that energy consumption in house 2 is not as sensitive to changes in weather variables as the conventional house. On average, we find that a one unit increase in heating and cooling degree minutes increases energy use by about 9% and 5% respectively for house 1 and 5% and 4% respectively for house 2. In addition, our findings suggest that non-temperature variables such as solar radiation and humidity affect energy use where the sensitivity rates for house 2 are consistently lower than that of house 1. Furthermore our result suggests that the sensitivity of energy use to weather depends on the season and specific time of the day/night.

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Mahelet G. Fikru, Luis Gautier, The impact of weather variation on energy consumption in residential houses, Applied Energy, Volume 144, 2015, Pages 19-30, ISSN 0306-2619, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apenergy.2015.01.040.

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