Energy benchmarking for shopping centers in Gulf Coast region
Publication Type
Original research
Authors

Building sector consumes a significant amount of energy worldwide (up to 40% of the total global energy); moreover, by the year 2030 the consumption is expected to increase by 50%. One of the reasons is that the performance of buildings and its components degrade over the years. In recent years, energy benchmarking for government office buildings, large scale public buildings and large commercial buildings is one of the key energy saving projects for promoting the development of building energy efficiency and sustainable energy savings in Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries. Benchmarking would increase the purchase of energy efficient equipment, reducing energy bills, CO2 emissions and conventional air pollution. This paper focuses on energy benchmarking for shopping centers in Gulf Coast Region. In addition, this paper will analyze a sample of shopping centers data in Gulf Coast Region (Dubai, Ajman, Sharjah, Oman and Bahrain). It aims to develop a benchmark for these shopping centers by highlighting the status of energy consumption performance. This research will support the sustainability movement in Gulf area through classifying the shopping centers into: Poor, Usual and Best Practices in terms of energy efficiency. According to the benchmarking analysis in this paper, the shopping centers best energy management practices in the Gulf Coast Region are the buildings that consume less than 810 kW h/m2/yr, whereas the poor building practices are the centers that consume greater than 1439 kW h/m2/yr. The conclusions of this work can be used as a reference for shopping centres benchmarking with similar climate.

Journal
Title
Energy Policy
Publisher
Elsevier
Publisher Country
United States of America
Indexing
Scopus
Impact Factor
None
Publication Type
Both (Printed and Online)
Volume
91
Year
2016
Pages
Pages 247-255