Evaluating Urban Residence Options to Meet Zero Energy Requirements: Simulation-Based Tradespace Exploration of Yokohama Considering Energy Production, Consumption, and Life-Cycle Cost

Most countries have announced ambitious decarbonization goals towards 2050. The Japanese government has declared a target to reduce CO2 emission by 46% from 2013 and taken on the challenge of reaching a height of 50%. Following this declaration, local governments are also considering specific plans...

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Main Author: Kawano, Masato
Other Authors: Bryan R. Moser
Format: Thesis
Published: Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2022
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/139471
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author Kawano, Masato
author2 Bryan R. Moser
author_facet Bryan R. Moser
Kawano, Masato
author_sort Kawano, Masato
collection MIT
description Most countries have announced ambitious decarbonization goals towards 2050. The Japanese government has declared a target to reduce CO2 emission by 46% from 2013 and taken on the challenge of reaching a height of 50%. Following this declaration, local governments are also considering specific plans for decarbonization. Among them, the City of Yokohama plays a leading role as the chairman of the local government. Yokohama has announced a renewable energy utilization strategy and is calling for dialogue on future issues. The purpose of this research is to clarify the future issues of the energy system of the City of Yokohama. The target is the household sector, and a house is regarded as a complex system in this paper. The systems approach explored the optimal system architecture. Stakeholder analysis confirms that Prosumers will be essential players in future energy systems. The owner of a decarbonized home system will be the Prosumer. To make the best architectural decisions, 360 concepts were defined and were simulated the performance of each concept: energy consumption and production. As an evaluation of economic efficiency, the payback period was calculated from the life cycle cost of each concept. Tradespaces based on performance and payback period were explored. As a result, it was found that the payback period is shortened (ten years can be seen), and the system performance is improved in the case where the PV capacity is large. The results of this research recommend installing PV as much as possible, while a cogeneration system is not recommended due to consumption of much gas. To further shorten the payback period, it is better to use a third-party-owned scheme. Although simulations show that the energy efficiency performance of electric and non-electric houses is comparable, non-electric houses use gas, so unless carbon-neutral gas is available, a new non-electric house is not recommended to achieve the decarbonization goal.
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spelling mit-1721.1/1394712022-01-15T03:18:54Z Evaluating Urban Residence Options to Meet Zero Energy Requirements: Simulation-Based Tradespace Exploration of Yokohama Considering Energy Production, Consumption, and Life-Cycle Cost Kawano, Masato Bryan R. Moser System Design and Management Program. Most countries have announced ambitious decarbonization goals towards 2050. The Japanese government has declared a target to reduce CO2 emission by 46% from 2013 and taken on the challenge of reaching a height of 50%. Following this declaration, local governments are also considering specific plans for decarbonization. Among them, the City of Yokohama plays a leading role as the chairman of the local government. Yokohama has announced a renewable energy utilization strategy and is calling for dialogue on future issues. The purpose of this research is to clarify the future issues of the energy system of the City of Yokohama. The target is the household sector, and a house is regarded as a complex system in this paper. The systems approach explored the optimal system architecture. Stakeholder analysis confirms that Prosumers will be essential players in future energy systems. The owner of a decarbonized home system will be the Prosumer. To make the best architectural decisions, 360 concepts were defined and were simulated the performance of each concept: energy consumption and production. As an evaluation of economic efficiency, the payback period was calculated from the life cycle cost of each concept. Tradespaces based on performance and payback period were explored. As a result, it was found that the payback period is shortened (ten years can be seen), and the system performance is improved in the case where the PV capacity is large. The results of this research recommend installing PV as much as possible, while a cogeneration system is not recommended due to consumption of much gas. To further shorten the payback period, it is better to use a third-party-owned scheme. Although simulations show that the energy efficiency performance of electric and non-electric houses is comparable, non-electric houses use gas, so unless carbon-neutral gas is available, a new non-electric house is not recommended to achieve the decarbonization goal. S.M. 2022-01-14T15:13:21Z 2022-01-14T15:13:21Z 2021-06 2021-06-25T20:17:03.024Z Thesis https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/139471 In Copyright - Educational Use Permitted Copyright retained by author(s) https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-EDU/1.0/ application/pdf Massachusetts Institute of Technology
spellingShingle Kawano, Masato
Evaluating Urban Residence Options to Meet Zero Energy Requirements: Simulation-Based Tradespace Exploration of Yokohama Considering Energy Production, Consumption, and Life-Cycle Cost
title Evaluating Urban Residence Options to Meet Zero Energy Requirements: Simulation-Based Tradespace Exploration of Yokohama Considering Energy Production, Consumption, and Life-Cycle Cost
title_full Evaluating Urban Residence Options to Meet Zero Energy Requirements: Simulation-Based Tradespace Exploration of Yokohama Considering Energy Production, Consumption, and Life-Cycle Cost
title_fullStr Evaluating Urban Residence Options to Meet Zero Energy Requirements: Simulation-Based Tradespace Exploration of Yokohama Considering Energy Production, Consumption, and Life-Cycle Cost
title_full_unstemmed Evaluating Urban Residence Options to Meet Zero Energy Requirements: Simulation-Based Tradespace Exploration of Yokohama Considering Energy Production, Consumption, and Life-Cycle Cost
title_short Evaluating Urban Residence Options to Meet Zero Energy Requirements: Simulation-Based Tradespace Exploration of Yokohama Considering Energy Production, Consumption, and Life-Cycle Cost
title_sort evaluating urban residence options to meet zero energy requirements simulation based tradespace exploration of yokohama considering energy production consumption and life cycle cost
url https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/139471
work_keys_str_mv AT kawanomasato evaluatingurbanresidenceoptionstomeetzeroenergyrequirementssimulationbasedtradespaceexplorationofyokohamaconsideringenergyproductionconsumptionandlifecyclecost