How do you calculate the CO2 emissions from a unit of electricity,
gas or district heating
used?
The government produces conversion factors that describe the typical carbon
impact of different energy sources. These allow us to take
the electricity use (in kWh)
and gas use (in m3)
and district heating use (in kWh)
, and calculate the approximate carbon dioxide emissions, normally measured in
kilograms of carbon dioxide equivalents (kgCO2e). We have used the conversion factors
from Defra's 2011 Guidelines.
The factors in use at each particular building are noted below in the
Assumptions section.
Why is there no scale on the small real time graph?
We made a small, simple real time display graph (we call it a 'teaser')
so that organisations can communicate about real-time energy use on their
homepages. The intention of the teaser is to present very simple, somewhat
intriguing information that attracts browsing users to the profile page (this
page!). It has to work in a very small area, and it can't support detailed
enquiry.
The building profile page where you are now is where the real information
lives. This is where we provide much more detail for those who have the time
and inclination to learn more.
How do you get this data from the buildings?
Getting this energy data out of some buildings is harder than others, but
in general the buildings contain a small low-power computer which takes very
frequent readings from the electricity,
gas and district heating
meters and stores the data.
Every few seconds, this computer sends the information it has collected to a
server. Your browser will then ask this server for the data it needs in order
to draw the real-time detailed graphs and website teasers. The energy impact
of this process is very low, and it gets lower with each additional site that
uses the system.
What do the colours on the graph mean?
The colours in the graph show approximately how the current level of usage
would lead to a given Operational Rating – as set out on a Display Energy
Certificate (DEC) – if the performance for a given moment carried on for an
entire year. This goes from dark green for ‘A’ to red for ‘G’. We calibrate
this using input data used for generating the building’s DEC, together with
information relating to 'normal' buildings of its type.