Incentive Design for Efficient Building Quality of Service
Anil Aswani, Claire Tomlin

TL;DR
This paper designs and analyzes incentive schemes for building HVAC systems to promote energy efficiency while balancing occupant satisfaction, addressing the limitations of traditional baselining approaches.
Contribution
It introduces a novel performance-based bonus incentive scheme for HVAC management, overcoming moral hazard issues and improving energy savings and occupant satisfaction.
Findings
Baselining schemes suffer from moral hazard and reduce occupant satisfaction.
The proposed bonus scheme encourages energy and monetary savings.
Numerical simulations confirm the effectiveness of the incentive design.
Abstract
Buildings are a large consumer of energy, and reducing their energy usage may provide financial and societal benefits. One challenge in achieving efficient building operation is the fact that few financial motivations exist for encouraging low energy configuration and operation of buildings. As a result, incentive schemes for managers of large buildings are being proposed for the purpose of saving energy. This paper focuses on incentive design for the configuration and operation of building-wide heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning (HVAC) systems, because these systems constitute the largest portion of energy usage in most buildings. We begin with an empirical model of a building-wide HVAC system, which describes the tradeoffs between energy consumption, quality of service (as defined by occupant satisfaction), and the amount of work required for maintenance and configuration. The…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSmart Grid Energy Management · Building Energy and Comfort Optimization · Energy Efficiency and Management
