Building energy use in COVID-19 lockdowns: Did much change?

Hollick, F; Humphrey, D; Oreszczyn, T; Elwell, C and Huebner, G (2024) Building energy use in COVID-19 lockdowns: Did much change? Buildings and Cities, 5(1), pp. 182-198. ISSN 2632-6655

Abstract

The lockdowns introduced to prevent the spread of COVID-19 had huge impacts, as people were largely confined to their homes. It could be expected that residential energy use would increase while non-residential decreased, however the picture is not so clear. Here three complementary datasets on different scales are used to explore changes in building energy use during two UK lockdowns: the complete building stock of Great Britain, a sample of approximately 1000 residential buildings, and one of about 24,000 residential boilers. Energy-signature analysis was used for the building data to estimate the changes in demand for space heating and other uses, with the boiler data able to separate space and water heating and explore changes in these. In the 2020 lockdown residential energy consumption for water heating and appliances increased, with decreased use for space heating, resulting in a reduction in total energy use during the heating season. In the 2021 lockdown total energy consumption changed little, however a decrease in the use of gas space heating was observed. The residential changes counteracted non-domestic changes, resulting in little difference in national energy consumption. These results highlight how longitudinal datasets enabled by Internet of Things-enabled devices can be crucial as an evidence base for research.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: building stock; COVID-19; energy data; energy demand; energy epidemiology; heating; homes; lockdown; UK; working from home
Date Deposited: 11 Apr 2025 12:43
Last Modified: 11 Apr 2025 12:43