Published August 21, 2023 | Version v1
Conference paper Open

Modelling energy consumption in supermarkets to reduce energy use and greenhouse gas emissions using EnergyPlus

  • 1. ROR icon London South Bank University
  • 2. ROR icon Institut National de Recherche pour l'Agriculture, l'Alimentation et l'Environnement

Description

New refrigeration system configurations and other innovating technologies in retail supermarkets need to be considered to reduce energy use and greenhouse gas emissions. In supermarkets, there is a strong interaction between the refrigerated display cases, supermarket structure, internal machinery, customers, and the store’s HVAC system. The impact of these interactions on the energy and carbon emissions of a medium sized supermarket in Paris was modelled using EnergyPlus™. The results were calibrated against a typical UK store and validated against the Paris store. The effects of applying the technologies identified to have the greatest potential to reduce carbon emissions (changing the refrigerant to R744, switching from gas to electrical heating and adding doors to chilled cabinets) were modelled. The impact of climate change on ambient temperature and the impact of changes to the grid conversion factor were predicted for the store in Paris from 2020 to 2050.

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Additional details

Identifiers

ISBN
978-2-36215-056-2
ISSN
0151-1637

Funding

ENOUGH – European food chain supply to reduce GHG emissions by 2050 101036588
European Commission

Dates

Available
2023-08-21