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Increased Ventilation Rates in Office Buildings Can Bring Billions of Dollars in Savings

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Increased Ventilation Rates in Office Buildings Can Bring Billions of Dollars in Savings

Current standards for U.S. offices require approximately 8 liters per second (L/s) of outdoor air ventilation per person. Providing twice as much ventilation would reduce sick building syndrome symptoms (SBS) and absences, improve work performance, and result in billions of dollars in annual economic benefits in the U.S., according to a recent study from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab).
Glass skyscrapers in a city.
A second study found that four remedial measures in U.S. offices—increasing low ventilation rates, improving temperature controls so that offices don't get too hot in winter, performing dampness and mold remediation, and adding economizers—would reduce adverse health effects and health care costs, decrease absence rates, improve thermal comfort, and improve work performance. The projected societal economic benefits of non-overlapping combinations of these remedial measures range from $17 billion to $26 billion per year.
These are among the conclusions of scientists at Berkeley Lab's Environmental Energy Technologies Division reported in two recently published journal articles.

Two Studies Examine Costs and Benefits

Two articles describing the results were published in the peer-reviewed journals Indoor Air and Building and Environment.
The Indoor Air article estimates the benefits of selected improvements in indoor environmental quality (IEQ) in U.S. offices compared to the existing level of IEQ in U.S. office buildings. They studied four improvements:
  • Increasing ventilation rates when they are below 10 or 15 L/s per person, (the current major standard in the U.S. specifies 8.3 L/s per person; 10 L/s is prevalent in other countries).
  • Adding outdoor air economizers and controls where absent. Economizers are control systems that increase the supply of outdoor air (the ventilation rate) above a minimum value when the additional ventilation will reduce the energy costs of air conditioning.
  • Avoiding office overheating—eliminating winter indoor temperatures greater than 23°C (73°F)—accomplished through adjustments in thermostat setpoints and other measures.
  • Reducing dampness and mold problems—accomplished through better maintenance to prevent and fix water leaks, changes in design and construction practices, and improved humidity control systems in some buildings within hot and humid climates.
The authors created scenarios and evaluated the impacts of improving existing IEQ conditions with equations derived from research on how IEQ parameters affect SBS health symptoms, absence, and work performance. They also used EnergyPlus, a building simulation model developed by Berkeley Lab, to estimate how the addition of economizers would affect ventilation rates and building energy use.
"The estimates of health benefits rely on dozens of studies of the relationship of IEQ with health, absence, and office work performance," says William Fisk, the principal investigator and head of the Indoor Environment Department. The benefits from these four improvements in office building IEQ are the result of small increases in work performance, reductions in absence, and decreases in health care costs spread over a large population of workers.
"The estimated annual benefits of increased ventilation rates (increased outdoor air supply) in offices are as high as $22 billion," says Fisk, "with annual energy costs less than $0.1 billion." The addition of economizers was a particularly attractive method of increasing ventilation rates. Projected net benefits are $12 to $22 billion, annual energy cost savings are $0.2 billion, and annualized implementation costs are also $0.2 billion, according to the research.
The study found that the estimated benefit of avoiding office overheating is $3.4 billion. Avoiding overheating prevents 7.7 million weekly sick building syndrome symptoms during winter, improves wintertime work performance on average by 0.2 percent, reduces winter dissatisfaction with thermal comfort by 12 percent among 40.4 million workers, and saves energy (not quantified in this study). The annual implementation cost is estimated at less than $0.4 billion.
The estimated annual benefit of reducing dampness and mold in offices is $0.5 billion, resulting from the elimination of 1.5 million days of absence.

Focus on Ventilation Rate Changes

The second article, appearing in the journal Building and Environment, estimates the benefits of increasing ventilation rates in U.S. offices, assuming that all existing offices have the minimum ventilation rate prescribed in the leading U.S. ventilation standard. The article is called "Changing Ventilation Rates in U.S. Offices: Implications for Health, Work Performance, Energy, and Associated Economics."
A body of prior research has shown that higher ventilation rates decrease indoor air pollutant levels, improve satisfaction with indoor air quality, lower SBS symptoms in office workers, and improve work performance. Some research also suggests that lower absence rates are linked to higher ventilation rates (VRs).
The study conducted by Fisk, Douglas Black of Berkeley Lab, and Gregory Brunner of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, assumed a baseline ventilation rate in U.S. office buildings of 8 L/s, which is slightly below the current ventilation rate recommended by ASHRAE (Association of Heating, Refrigeration, Air Conditioning Engineers). Eight liters of air per second is about 16 cubic feet per minute. ASHRAE sets voluntary minimum standards for buildings, and ventilation standards are designed to prevent high concentrations of indoor pollutants.
Two scenarios assumed that ventilation rates increased from 8 to 10 L/s per person and from 8 to 15 L/s per person. The third scenario assumed that ventilation rates decreased from 8 to 6.5 L/s per person. In a fourth scenario with an 8 L/s per person minimum ventilation rate, economizers were added to the 50 percent of U.S. office floor space in buildings that do not have them.
The result showed that with a 25 percent increase in ventilation rate to 10.0 L/s per person, the total economic benefit was $13.0 billion, and the estimated annual energy cost was $0.05 billion. The estimated benefits include prevention of SBS symptoms in half a million workers, elimination of 9.4 million days of short-term absence, and an average 0.3 percent increase in work performance.
With a 90 percent increase in ventilation rate to 15.0 L/s per person, the research showed a total benefit of $37.5 billion, at an estimated annual energy cost of $0.19 billion. The increased ventilation rate prevented SBS symptoms in 1.4 million workers, eliminated 30 million days of short-term absence, and increased work performance on average by 0.9 percent.
With a minimum ventilation rate of 8 L/s per person, adding economizers to buildings that do not have them was projected to save $0.32 billion in energy costs each year. In this scenario, the measure prevented SBS symptoms in 1.2 million workers, prevented 28 million days of short-term absence, and increased average work performance by 1.6 percent. The total annual economic benefit was estimated at $32.9 billion.
The benefits are again the result of small increases in work performance, reductions in absences, and decreases in health care costs spread over a large population of workers.
"Our study shows that the widespread benefits of increasing ventilation rates in office buildings far outweigh the energy costs by an order of magnitude, says Fisk, "and increasing the use of economizers in more commercial buildings would retain the benefits of higher VRs as well as result in energy savings."
Fisk cautions that there are several uncertainties in this study."Our understanding of how ventilation rate affects health, performance, and absence is the main source of uncertainty," he says.
"The value of this study to building owners and energy managers, architects and engineers, and policy makers is that, although there are uncertainties in the absolute magnitude of health benefits and energy costs, the study has shown that the economic benefits from improved health, reduced absenteeism, and improved work performance are far higher than the implementation cost."
"Most importantly," Fisk concludes, "there are opportunities to improve the health of building occupants and save on costs while reducing energy use simultaneously."
—Allan Chen

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