FARIS MOKHTAR Today Online 5 Sep 18;
SINGAPORE — In a push to get more non-residential buildings to go green, the authorities have introduced a new energy rating that aims to make buildings at least 60 per cent more energy-efficient than the current building codes, which were set in 2005.
Under the new rating, called Green Mark for Super Low Energy, buildings cannot use more than 100 kilowatt hour (kwh) per square metre a year, the Building and Construction Authority (BCA) announced at the opening day of the Singapore Green Building Week on Wednesday (Sept 5).
The Super Low Energy rating targets new and existing commercial and retail offices, industrial buildings as well as schools, and hopes to get industry players to push boundaries on energy efficiency to “achieve best-in-class building energy performance in a cost-effective manner”.
The authorities are striving to achieve up to 80 per cent energy efficiency for buildings here, though the BCA noted that more research and innovation is needed so that the measures are also cost-effective.
The initiative is voluntary and so far, more than 10 organisations, including the Defence Science and Technology Agency as well as the Singapore Management University have committed to adopt the new rating.
Chief executive of BCA Hugh Lim said that by setting such new performance benchmarks, “Singapore can play an important role in mitigating climate change and doing our part as a responsible global citizen”.
The authorities cited the Keppel Bay Tower, located at Harbourfront, as an example of a building that is trying to adopt the super low energy approach by piloting emerging technologies that include a smart lighting system and an air-handling unit fan that is about 25 per cent more energy-efficient and expected to run at a lower noise level.
BCA launches new energy rating for non-residential buildings
Aw Cheng Wei and Jose Hong Straits Times 5 Sep 18;
SINGAPORE - Solar shades, natural ventilation and renewable energy panels are some of the prospective energy-saving features the national regulator wants to see in more Singapore buildings.
To intensify the move to a greener future, the Building and Construction Authority (BCA) has launched a new energy rating for buildings that are at least 60 per cent more energy efficient compared with 2005 building codes. This was announced on Wednesday (Sept 5), the first day of the Singapore Green Building Week (SGBW) at Marina Bay Sands.
Under the new rating, called Green Mark for Super Low Energy, office buildings cannot use more than 100 kilowatt hour (kwh) per sq m a year.
To help more buildings qualify for the voluntary rating, the BCA is working with industry professionals, including property developers, to build such super low energy buildings, said its chief executive, Mr Hugh Lim.
The BCA is also doing more rigorous research and innovation to further push the frontier for green buildings, he added.
"By setting such new performance benchmarks, Singapore can play an important role in mitigating climate change," Mr Lim said.
Previously, the highest class under the Green Mark - the BCA's benchmarking scheme - was the Green Mark Platinum, awarded to buildings that save at least half of the energy listed in the 2005 building codes.
More than 10 organisations, including Defence Science and Technology Agency, Singapore Management University and City Developments, have pledged to achieve at least one super low energy project in the next five years, a BCA spokesman said.
The BCA is now working with property developer Keppel Land to convert Keppel Bay Tower, a Green Mark Platinum building, into a super low energy building.
In 2017, Keppel Land was awarded $1.28 million from the BCA's Green Buildings Innovation Cluster to conduct a pilot on super low energy technologies at its building in HarbourFront.
Five technologies to be tested in the 18-storey building later this month include: a smart lighting system, a fresh air intake system that regulates the flow of outside air into the tower, and a cooling tower system that regulates the structure’s temperature without the need for chemical water treatment.
It is not common for buildings in Singapore to have all of these technologies within the same structure.
If successful, the building's annual energy consumption is expected to go down by 20 per cent, from 145kwh per sq m a year to 115kwh per sq m a year, said the company's spokesman on Wednesday. The outcome would help the company save $250,000 a year.
That translates to an estimated overall annual energy savings of about 1.5 million kwh, equivalent to the energy required to power more than 250 five-room Housing Board flats for one year.
It will also mean annual savings of about 7,000 cubic m of water, enough to fill three Olympic-size swimming pools.
When applied to the entire building, annual energy consumption is estimated to fall to 92kwh per sq m, the spokesman added. The pilot is expected to be completed by July 2020.
Speaking at the SGBW opening ceremony, Minister for National Development Lawrence Wong said that next year's green building week would be in a different format and include areas like smart facilities management.
"We don't just want to continue with the status quo, but we're looking to see how the entire week can be revamped and improved," he said.
"So come next year, we are planning an international built environment week... Essentially, we want to make this bigger and better all under one roof, where there can be a comprehensive showcase of new and innovative technologies."