We have an increasing number of projects, where the client is coming to us with "net zero" aspirations and plans, some of which don't fit the typical all-electric, grid-tied building that produces 100%+ of its annual energy use on-site. There include examples like:
1) A (targetd) living building that maximizes on-site production, with the remainder on another buidling in the same utility region
2) A state government project that is mostly electric, but uses some fossil fuels at a commercial kitchen and a CUP that it is tied into, but is purchasing 100% dedicated renewable energy from a local utility array through a 15+ year contract
3) A large commercial ofice building where the owner is developing its own offsite utility-scale array to supply its energy for the project (as well as some others)
4) in addition to some others that are choosing to go all-electric with renewable energy contracts
Its clear to me that #4 isnt' "net zero energy" (but would be net zero carbon in operational energy use), but you (and the client, and our marketing group) could make an argument for the others, too. In general, I'm not going to stand in the way of clients claiming net zero (and if everyone of our clients was 90% of the way there, we'd be in a better world), but for our internal tracking purposes, and for the industry going forward, it'd be nice to have clear definition.
I'm aware DOE has come out with a few position papers over the years (one in 2015 set the line based on source energy balance of use and on-site renewable energy exports), but I'm not sure this is definitive - I'd make an exception for project funded off-site renewables. As well, LEED v4.1 has 5 tiers of renewable energy types in the merger of onsite renewables and green energy,which is useful but doesn't distinctly draw the line. Finally, I know the AIA 2030 commitment is re-jiggering how it accounts for renewable energy as we get close to 2030, but not aware exactly what is in the works.
Anyone have a resource, or thoughts?
Happy holidays all!
-C