Data-driven optimization for mitigating energy consumption and GHG emissions in buildings

To cope with rapid urbanization and achieve urban sustainable development, both energy efficiency and GHG emissions in the building sector are considered as the main challenges in recent years. Multi-objective optimization will be a useful tool in energy saving and low carbon for town planning polic...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zhang, Yan, Teoh, Bak Koon, Zhang, Limao
Other Authors: School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/179170
Description
Summary:To cope with rapid urbanization and achieve urban sustainable development, both energy efficiency and GHG emissions in the building sector are considered as the main challenges in recent years. Multi-objective optimization will be a useful tool in energy saving and low carbon for town planning policy making. This study incorporates geographical weighting (GW) with the Light Gradient Boosting Machine (LGBM), namely the GW-LGBM method, to analyze the impact of the surrounding environment on building energy performance. Besides, a genetic algorithm-based approach is applied in this research to achieve a multi-objective optimization solution for buildings' energy performance and GHG emissions. A Pareto front of the optimal trade-off solution with different influential variables and multi-objectives can be determined. Several scenarios incorporating various percentages of constraints are performed, aiming to provide more strategies for decision-makers under different situations. The main findings are summarized as: (1) The proposed GW-LGBM shows superior predictability for assessing the buildings' energy performance than the traditional LGBM. The value of the indices R2 is 0.91 in site EUWN (weather normalized energy use) and 0.90 in GHG emissions, which have respectively 6.14% and 9.22% improvement compared with the LGBM; (2) Four common factors, including the Natural gas, total Gross floor area, Energy star score, and shape form, are identified as the most important factors for both site EUWN and GHG emissions; (3) The change of the three influence factors, such as the natural gas, vertical to horizontal ratio, and greenery density, is expected to achieve a 37.77% improvement for mitigating energy consumption and GHG emissions given a 10% change in the adjustable factors. The novelty lies in the development of GW-LGBM by adding geographical weight to learning energy patterns for achieving more accurate results in building performance estimation and optimization.