(a) the common general framework for a methodology for calculating the integrated energy performance of buildings and building units; (b) the application of minimum energy performance requirements to new buildings and new building units; (c) the application of minimum energy performance requirements to: (i) existing buildings and existing building units that are undergoing major renovation; (ii) building elements that form part of the building envelope and that have a significant impact on the energy performance of the building envelope when they are retrofitted or replaced; (iii) technical building systems where they are installed, replaced or upgraded;
(d) the application of minimum energy performance standards to existing buildings and existing building units, in accordance with Articles 3 and 9; (e) the calculation and disclosure of the life-cycle global warming potential of buildings; (f) solar energy in buildings; (g) renovation passports; (h) national building renovation plans; (i) sustainable mobility infrastructure in and adjacent to buildings; (j) smart buildings; (k) energy performance certification of buildings or building units; (l) regular inspection of heating systems, ventilation systems and air-conditioning systems in buildings; (m) independent control systems for energy performance certificates, renovation passports, smart readiness indicators and inspection reports; (n) the indoor environmental quality performance of buildings.
Directive (EU) 2024/1275 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 24 April 2024 on the energy performance of buildings (recast) (Text with EEA relevance)
(1) "building" means a roofed construction having walls, for which energy is used to condition the indoor environment; (2) "zero-emission building" means a building with a very high energy performance, as determined in accordance with Annex I, requiring zero or a very low amount of energy, producing zero on-site carbon emissions from fossil fuels and producing zero or a very low amount of operational greenhouse gas emissions, in accordance with Article 11; (3) "nearly zero-energy building" means a building with a very high energy performance, as determined in accordance with Annex I, which is no worse than the 2023 cost-optimal level reported by Member States pursuant to Article 6(2) and where the nearly zero or very low amount of energy required is covered to a very significant extent by energy from renewable sources, including energy from renewable sources produced on-site or energy from renewable sources produced nearby; (4) "minimum energy performance standards" means rules that require existing buildings to meet an energy performance requirement as part of a wide renovation plan for a building stock or at a trigger point on the market such as sale, rent, donation or change of purpose within the cadastre or land registry, in a period of time or by a specific date, thereby triggering the renovation of existing buildings; (5) "public bodies" means public bodies as defined in Article 2, point (12), of Directive (EU) 2023/1791; (6) "technical building system" means technical equipment of a building or building unit for space heating, space cooling, ventilation, domestic hot water, built-in lighting, building automation and control, on-site renewable energy generation and energy storage, or a combination thereof, including those systems using energy from renewable sources; (7) "building automation and control system" means a system comprising all products, software and engineering services that can support energy-efficient, economical and safe operation of technical building systems through automatic controls and by facilitating the manual management of those technical building systems; (8) "energy performance of a building" means the calculated or metered amount of energy needed to meet the energy demand associated with a typical use of the building, which includes energy used for heating, cooling, ventilation, domestic hot water and lighting; (9) "primary energy" means energy from renewable and non-renewable sources which has not undergone any conversion or transformation process; (10) "metered" means measured by a relevant device, such as an energy meter, a power meter, a power metering and monitoring device, or an electricity meter; (11) "non-renewable primary energy factor" means an indicator that is calculated by dividing the primary energy from non-renewable sources for a given energy carrier, including the delivered energy and the calculated energy overheads of delivery to the points of use, by the delivered energy; (12) "renewable primary energy factor" means an indicator that is calculated by dividing the primary energy from renewable sources from an on-site, nearby or distant energy source that is delivered via a given energy carrier, including the delivered energy and the calculated energy overheads of delivery to the points of use, by the delivered energy; (13) "total primary energy factor" means the sum of renewable and non-renewable primary energy factors for a given energy carrier; (14) "energy from renewable sources" means energy from renewable non-fossil sources, namely wind, solar (solar thermal and solar photovoltaic) and geothermal energy, osmotic energy, ambient energy, tide, wave and other ocean energy, hydropower, biomass, landfill gas, sewage treatment plant gas, and biogas; (15) "building envelope" means the integrated elements of a building which separate its interior from the outdoor environment; (16) "building unit" means a section, floor or apartment within a building which is designed or altered to be used separately; (17) "building element" means a technical building system or an element of the building envelope; (18) "residential building or building unit" means a room or suite of rooms in a permanent building or a structurally separated part of a building which is designed for all-year habitation by one private household; (19) "renovation passport" means a tailored roadmap for the deep renovation of a specific building in a maximum number of steps that will significantly improve its energy performance; (20) "deep renovation" means a renovation which is in line with the "energy efficiency first" principle, which focuses on essential building elements and which transforms a building or building unit: (a) before 1 January 2030 , into a nearly zero-energy building;(b) from 1 January 2030 , into a zero-emission building;
(21) "staged deep renovation" means a deep renovation carried out in a maximum number of steps, asset out in a renovation passport; (22) "major renovation" means the renovation of a building where: (a) the total cost of the renovation relating to the building envelope or the technical building systems is higher than 25 % of the value of the building, excluding the value of the land upon which the building is situated; or (b) more than 25 % of the surface of the building envelope undergoes renovation.
Member States may choose to apply point (a) or (b); (23) "operational greenhouse gas emissions" means greenhouse gas emissions associated with the energy consumption of the technical building systems during the use and operation of the building; (24) "whole-life-cycle greenhouse gas emissions" means greenhouse gas emissions that occur over the whole life cycle of a building, including the production and transport of construction products, construction-site activities, the use of energy in the building and replacement of construction products, as well as demolition, transport and management of waste materials and their reuse, recycling and final disposal; (25) "life-cycle global warming potential" or "life-cycle GWP" means an indicator which quantifies the global warming potential contributions of a building along its full life cycle; (26) "split incentives" means split incentives as defined in Article 2, point (54), of Directive (EU) 2023/1791; (27) "energy poverty" means energy poverty as defined in Article 2, point (52), of Directive (EU) 2023/1791; (28) "vulnerable households" means households in energy poverty or households, including lower middle-income households, that are particularly exposed to high energy costs and that lack the means to renovate the building that they occupy; (29) "European standard" means a standard adopted by the European Committee for Standardization, the European Committee for Electrotechnical Standardization or the European Telecommunications Standards Institute and made available for public use; (30) "energy performance certificate" means a certificate, recognised by a Member State or by a legal person designated by it, which indicates the energy performance of a building or building unit, calculated in accordance with a methodology adopted pursuant to Article 4; (31) "cogeneration" means the simultaneous generation in one process of thermal energy and electrical or mechanical energy; (32) "cost-optimal level" means the energy performance level which leads to the lowest cost during the estimated economic life cycle, where: (a) the lowest cost is determined taking into account: (i) the category and use of the building concerned; (ii) energy-related investment costs on the basis of official forecasts; (iii) maintenance and operating costs, including energy costs taking into account the cost of greenhouse gas allowances; (iv) environmental and health externalities of energy use; (v) earnings from energy produced on-site, where applicable; (vi) waste management costs, where applicable; and
(b) the estimated economic life cycle is determined by each Member State and refers to the remaining estimated economic life cycle of a building where energy performance requirements are set for the building as a whole, or to the estimated economic life cycle of a building element where energy performance requirements are set for building elements.
The cost-optimal level shall lie within the range of performance levels where the cost-benefit analysis calculated over the estimated economic life cycle is positive; (33) "recharging point" means a recharging point as defined in Article 2, point (48), of Regulation (EU) 2023/1804 of the European Parliament and of the Council ;Regulation (EU) 2023/1804 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 13 September 2023 on the deployment of alternative fuels infrastructure, and repealing Directive 2014/94/EU (OJ L 234, 22.9.2023, p. 1 ).(34) "pre-cabling" means all measures that are necessary to enable the installation of recharging points, including data transmission, cables, cable routes and, where necessary, electricity meters; (35) "roofed car park" means a roofed construction, with at least three car parking spaces, that does not use energy to condition the indoor environment; (36) "micro-isolated system" means any system with consumption less than 500 GWh in the year 2022, where there is no connection with other systems; (37) "smart recharging" means smart recharging as defined in Article 2, second paragraph, point (14m), of Directive (EU) 2018/2001 of the European Parliament and of the Council ;Directive (EU) 2018/2001 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 11 December 2018 on the promotion of the use of energy from renewable sources (OJ L 328, 21.12.2018, p. 82 ).(38) "bi-directional recharging" means bi-directional recharging as defined in Article 2, point (11), of Regulation (EU) 2023/1804; (39) "mortgage portfolio standards" means mechanisms incentivising mortgage lenders to establish a path to increase the median energy performance of the portfolio of buildings covered by their mortgages towards 2030 and 2050, and to encourage potential clients to improve the energy performance of their property in line with the Union’s decarbonisation ambition and relevant energy targets in the area of energy consumption in buildings, relying on the criteria for determining environmentally sustainable economic activities set out in Article 3 of Regulation (EU) 2020/852; (40) "pay-as-you-save financial scheme" means a loan scheme dedicated exclusively to energy performance improvements where a correlation is established in the designing of the scheme between the repayments on the loan and the achieved energy savings, also taking into account other economic factors such as the indexation of the energy cost, interest rates, increased asset value and loan re-financing; (41) "digital building logbook" means a common repository for all relevant building data, including data related to energy performance such as energy performance certificates, renovation passports and smart readiness indicators, as well as data related to the life-cycle GWP, which facilitates informed decision making and information sharing within the construction sector, and among building owners and occupants, financial institutions and public bodies; (42) "air-conditioning system" means a combination of the components required to provide a form of indoor air treatment, by which temperature is controlled or can be lowered; (43) "heating system" means a combination of the components required to provide a form of indoor air treatment, by which the temperature is increased; (44) "ventilation system" means the technical building system which provides outdoor air to a space by natural or mechanical means; (45) "heat generator" means the part of a heating system that generates useful heat for uses identified in Annex I, using one or more of the following processes: (a) the combustion of fuels in, for example, a boiler; (b) the Joule effect, taking place in the heating elements of an electric resistance heating system; (c) capturing heat from ambient air, ventilation exhaust air, or a water or ground heat source using a heat pump;
(46) "cooling generator" means the part of an air-conditioning system that generates useful cooling for uses identified in Annex I; (47) "energy performance contracting" means energy performance contracting as defined in Article 2, point (33), of Directive (EU) 2023/1791; (48) "boiler" means the combined boiler body-burner unit, designed to transmit to fluids the heat released from burning; (49) "effective rated output" means the maximum calorific output, expressed in kW, specified and guaranteed by the manufacturer as being deliverable during continuous operation while complying with the useful efficiency indicated by the manufacturer; (50) "district heating" or "district cooling" means the distribution of thermal energy in the form of steam, hot water or chilled liquids, from a central or decentralised source of production through a network to multiple buildings or sites, for the use of space or process heating or cooling; (51) "useful floor area" means the area of the floor of a building needed as parameter to quantify specific conditions of use that are expressed per unit of floor area and for the application of the simplifications and the zoning and allocation or re-allocation rules; (52) "reference floor area" means the floor area used as reference size for the assessment of the energy performance of a building, calculated as the sum of the useful floor areas of the spaces within the building envelope specified for the energy performance assessment; (53) "assessment boundary" means the boundary where the delivered energy and exported energy are measured or calculated; (54) "on-site" means in or on a particular building or on the land on which that building is located; (55) "energy from renewable sources produced nearby" means energy from renewable sources, produced within a local or district-level perimeter of a particular building, which fulfils all of the following conditions: (a) it can be distributed and used only within that local and district-level perimeter through a dedicated distribution network; (b) it allows for the calculation of a specific primary energy factor valid only for the energy from renewable sources produced within that local or district-level perimeter; and (c) it can be used on-site through a dedicated connection to the energy production source, where that dedicated connection requires specific equipment for the safe supply and metering of energy for self-use of the building;
(56) "services related to the energy performance of buildings" or "EPB services" means the services, such as heating, cooling, ventilation, domestic hot water and lighting and others for which the energy use is taken into account in the calculation of the energy performance of buildings; (57) "energy needs" means the energy to be delivered to, or extracted from, a conditioned space to maintain the intended space conditions during a given period of time, disregarding any technical building system inefficiencies; (58) "energy use" or "energy consumption" means energy input to a technical building system providing an EPB service intended to satisfy an energy need; (59) "self-use" means the use of energy from renewable sources produced on-site or energy from renewable sources produced nearby by on-site technical systems for EPB services; (60) "other on-site uses" means on-site uses other than EPB services, including appliances, miscellaneous and ancillary loads, or electro-mobility recharging points; (61) "calculation interval" means the discrete time interval used for the calculation of the energy performance; (62) "delivered energy" means energy, expressed per energy carrier, supplied to the technical building systems through the assessment boundary, to satisfy the uses taken into account or to produce the exported energy; (63) "exported energy" means the proportion of the renewable energy, expressed per energy carrier and per primary energy factor, that is exported to the energy grid instead of being used on-site for self-use or for other on-site uses; (64) "bicycle parking space" means a designated space for parking at least one bicycle; (65) "car park physically adjacent to a building" means a car park which is intended for the use of residents, visitors or workers of a building and which is located within the property area of the building or is in the direct vicinity of the building; (66) "indoor environmental quality" means the result of an assessment of the conditions inside a building that influence the health and wellbeing of its occupants, based upon parameters such as those relating to the temperature, humidity, ventilation rate and presence of contaminants.
(a) an overview of the national building stock for different building types, including their share in the national building stock, construction periods and climatic zones, based, as appropriate, on statistical sampling and the national database for energy performance certificates pursuant to Article 22, an overview of market barriers and market failures and an overview of the capacities in the construction, energy efficiency and renewable energy sectors, and of the share of vulnerable households based, as appropriate, on statistical sampling; (b) a roadmap with nationally established targets and measurable progress indicators, including the reduction of the number of people affected by energy poverty, with a view to achieving the 2050 climate neutrality goal, in order to ensure a highly energy-efficient and decarbonised national building stock and the transformation of existing buildings into zero-emission buildings by 2050; (c) an overview of implemented and planned policies and measures, supporting the implementation of the roadmap pursuant to point (b); (d) an outline of the investment needs for the implementation of the national building renovation plan, the financing sources and measures, and the administrative resources for building renovation; (e) the thresholds for the operational greenhouse gas emissions and annual primary energy demand of a new or renovated zero-emission building pursuant to Article 11; (f) minimum energy performance standards for non-residential buildings on the basis of maximum energy performance thresholds pursuant to Article 9(1); (g) national trajectory for the renovation of the residential building stock, including the 2030 and 2035 milestones for average primary energy use in kWh/(m 2 .y) pursuant to Article 9(2); and(h) an evidence-based estimate of expected energy savings and wider benefits, including those related to indoor environmental quality.
(a) the level of ambition of the nationally established targets is sufficient and in line with the national commitments on climate and energy laid down in the national integrated energy and climate plans; (b) the policies and measures are sufficient to achieve the nationally established targets; (c) the allocation of budgetary and administrative resources is sufficient for the implementation of the plan; (d) the financing sources and measures referred to in paragraph 2, first subparagraph, point (d), of this Article are in line with the planned reduction of energy poverty referred to in paragraph 2, first subparagraph, point (b), of this Article; (e) the plans prioritise the renovation of worst-performing buildings in accordance with Article 9; (f) the public consultation pursuant to paragraph 4 has been sufficiently inclusive; and (g) the plans comply with the requirements of paragraph 1 and the template in Annex II.
(a) buildings owned by the armed forces or central government and serving national defence purposes, apart from single living quarters or office buildings for the armed forces and other staff employed by national defence authorities; (b) buildings used as places of worship and for religious activities; (c) temporary buildings with a time of use of two years or less, industrial sites, workshops and non-residential agricultural buildings with low energy demand and non-residential agricultural buildings which are used by a sector covered by a national sectoral agreement on energy performance; (d) residential buildings which are used or intended to be used for either less than four months of the year or, alternatively, for a limited annual time of use and with an expected energy consumption of less than 25 % of what would be the result of all-year use; (e) stand-alone buildings with a total useful floor area of less than 50 m 2 .
(a) from 1 January 2028 , new buildings owned by public bodies; and(b) from 1 January 2030 , all new buildings;
(a) from 1 January 2028 , for all new buildings with a useful floor area larger than1000 m2 ;(b) from 1 January 2030 , for all new buildings.
(a) the 16 % threshold from 2030; and (b) the 26 % threshold from 2033.
(a) decreases by at least 16 % compared to 2020 by 2030; (b) decreases by at least 20-22 % compared to 2020 by 2035; (c) by 2040, and every 5 years thereafter, is equivalent to, or lower than the nationally determined value derived from a progressive decrease in the average primary energy use from 2030 to 2050, in line with the transformation of the residential building stock into a zero-emission building stock.
(a) providing appropriate financial measures, in particular those targeting vulnerable households, people affected by energy poverty or, where applicable, living in social housing, in accordance with Article 24 of Directive (EU) 2023/1791; (b) providing technical assistance, including through one-stop shops with a particular focus on vulnerable households and, where applicable, people living in social housing, in accordance with Article 24 of Directive (EU) 2023/1791; (c) designing integrated financing schemes which provide incentives for deep renovations and staged deep renovations, pursuant to Article 17; (d) removing non-economic barriers, including split incentives; and (e) monitoring social impacts, in particular on the most vulnerable households.
(a) buildings officially protected as part of a designated environment or because of their special architectural or historical merit, or other heritage buildings, in so far as compliance with the standards would unacceptably alter their character or appearance, or if their renovation is not technically or economically feasible; (b) buildings used as places of worship and for religious activities; (c) temporary buildings with a time of use of two years or less, industrial sites, workshops and non-residential agricultural buildings with low energy demand and non-residential agricultural buildings which are used by a sector covered by a national sectoral agreement on energy performance; (d) residential buildings which are used or intended to be used for either less than four months of the year or, alternatively, for a limited annual time of use and with an expected energy consumption of less than 25 % of what would be the result of all-year use; (e) stand-alone buildings with a total useful floor area of less than 50 m 2 ;(f) buildings owned by the armed forces or central government and serving national defence purposes, apart from single living quarters or office buildings for the armed forces and other staff employed by national defence authorities.
(a) the effectiveness of, the appropriateness of the level of, the actual amount used from, and the types of instrument used with regard to structural funds and Union framework programmes, including funding from the European Investment Bank, for improving the energy performance of buildings, especially in housing; (b) the effectiveness of, the appropriateness of the level of, and the types of instrument and types of measure used with regard to funds from public finance institutions; (c) the coordination of Union and national funding and other types of measure that can act as leverage for stimulating investments in the energy performance of buildings, and the adequacy of such funding for achieving Union objectives.
(a) by 31 December 2026 , on all new public and non-residential buildings with useful floor area larger than 250 m2 ;(b) on all existing public buildings with useful floor area larger than: (i) 2000 m2 , by31 December 2027 ;(ii) 750 m 2 , by31 December 2028 ;(iii) 250 m 2 , by31 December 2030 ;
(c) by 31 December 2027 , on existing non-residential buildings with useful floor area larger than 500 m2 , where the building undergoes a major renovation or an action that requires an administrative permit for building renovations, works on the roof or the installation of a technical building system;(d) by 31 December 2029 , on all new residential buildings; and(e) by 31 December 2029 , on all new roofed car parks physically adjacent to buildings.
(a) energy from renewable sources generated on-site or nearby, fulfilling the criteria laid down in Article 7 of Directive (EU) 2018/2001; (b) energy from renewable sources provided from a renewable energy community within the meaning of Article 22 of Directive (EU) 2018/2001; (c) energy from an efficient district heating and cooling system in accordance with Article 26(1) of Directive (EU) 2023/1791; or (d) energy from carbon-free sources.
(a) by 31 December 2024 , non-residential buildings with an effective rated output for heating systems, air-conditioning systems, systems for combined space heating and ventilation, or systems for combined air conditioning and ventilation of over 290 kW;(b) by 31 December 2029 , non-residential buildings with an effective rated output for heating systems, air-conditioning systems, systems for combined space heating and ventilation, or systems for combined air conditioning and ventilation of over 70 kW.
(a) continuously monitoring, logging, analysing and allowing for adjusting energy use; (b) benchmarking the building’s energy efficiency, detecting losses in efficiency of technical building systems, and informing the person responsible for the facilities or technical building management about opportunities for energy efficiency improvement; (c) allowing communication with connected technical building systems and other appliances inside the building, and being interoperable with technical building systems across different types of proprietary technologies, devices and manufacturers; (d) by 29 May 2026 monitoring of indoor environmental quality.
(a) the functionality of continuous electronic monitoring that measures systems’ efficiency and informs building owners or managers in the case of a significant variation and when system servicing is necessary; (b) effective control functionalities to ensure optimum generation, distribution, storage, use of energy and, where applicable, hydronic balance; (c) a capacity to react to external signals and adjust the energy consumption.
(a) over 290 kW are equipped with automatic lighting controls by 31 December 2027 ;(b) over 70 kW are equipped with automatic lighting controls by 31 December 2029 .
(a) the installation of at least one recharging point for every five car parking spaces; (b) the installation of pre-cabling for at least 50 % of car parking spaces and ducting, namely conduits for electric cables, for the remaining car parking spaces, to enable the installation at a later stage of recharging points for electric vehicles, electrically power-assisted cycles and other L-category vehicle types; and (c) the provision of bicycle parking spaces representing at least 15 % of average or 10 % of total user capacity of non-residential buildings, taking into account the space required also for bicycles with larger dimensions than standard bicycles.
(a) the car park is located inside the building, and, for major renovations, renovation measures include the car park or the electrical infrastructure of the building; or (b) the car park is physically adjacent to the building, and, for major renovations, renovation measures include the car park or the electrical infrastructure of the car park.
(a) the installation of at least one recharging point for every 10 car parking spaces, or of ducting, namely conduits for electric cables, for at least 50 % of the car parking spaces to enable the installation at a later stage of recharging points for electric vehicles; and (b) the provision of bicycle parking spaces representing at least 15 % of average or 10 % of total user capacity of the building and with space required also for bicycles with larger dimensions than standard bicycles.
(a) the installation of pre-cabling for at least 50 % of car parking spaces and ducting, namely conduits for electric cables, for the remaining car parking spaces to enable the installation, at a later stage, of recharging points for electric vehicles, electrically power-assisted cycles and other L-category vehicle types; and (b) the provision of at least two bicycle parking spaces for every residential building unit.
(a) the car park is located inside the building, and, for major renovations, renovation measures include the car park or the electric infrastructure of the building; or (b) the car park is physically adjacent to the building, and, for major renovations, renovation measures include the car park or the electrical infrastructure of the car park.
(a) the recharging infrastructure required would rely on micro-isolated systems or the buildings are situated in the outermost regions within the meaning of Article 349 TFEU where this would lead to substantial problems for the operation of the local energy system and would endanger the stability of the local grid; or (b) the cost of the recharging and ducting installations exceeds at least 10 % of the total cost of the major renovation of the building.
(a) the definition of the smart readiness indicator; (b) a methodology by which it is to be calculated.
(a) the energy performance of the equipment or material used for the renovation and the related greenhouse gas emission reduction; in which case, the equipment or material used for the renovation is to be installed by an installer with the relevant level of certification or qualification and shall comply with at least minimum energy performance requirements for building elements or higher reference values for an improved energy performance of buildings; (b) standard values for the calculation of energy savings and greenhouse gas emission reduction in buildings; (c) the improvement achieved due to such renovation by comparing energy performance certificates issued before and after renovation; (d) the results of an energy audit; (e) the results of another relevant, transparent and proportionate method that shows the improvement in energy performance, for example by comparing the energy consumption before and after renovation with metering systems, provided it complies with the requirements set out in Annex I.
(a) per 80000 inhabitants;(b) per region; (c) in areas where the average age of the building stock is above the national average; (d) in areas where Member States intend to implement integrated district renovation programmes; or (e) in a location that can be reached within less than 90 minutes of average travel time, on the basis of the means of transport that is locally available.
(a) provide streamlined information on technical and financial possibilities and solutions to households, SMEs including microenterprises, and public bodies; (b) provide holistic support to all households, with a particular focus on households affected by energy poverty and on worst-performing buildings, as well as to accredited companies and installers providing retrofit services, adapted to different housing typologies and geographical scope, and provide support covering the different stages of the retrofit project.
(a) provide independent advice on the energy performance of buildings and may accompany integrated district renovation programmes; (b) offer dedicated services for vulnerable households, people affected by energy poverty and people in low-income households.
(a) measures carried out in connection with a major renovation of the building envelope or technical building system or systems; and (b) measures for individual building elements independent of a major renovation of the building envelope or technical building system or systems.
(a) on a common certification of the whole building; or (b) on the assessment of another representative building unit with the same energy-relevant characteristics in the same building.
(a) immediately after the energy performance certificate of the building expires; or (b) five years after the issuance of the energy performance certificate.
(a) buildings or building units when they are constructed, when they have undergone a major renovation, when they are sold, when they are rented out to a new tenant, or for which a rental contract is renewed; (b) existing buildings owned or occupied by public bodies.
(a) the following actual thermal characteristics of the building including its internal partitions: (i) thermal capacity; (ii) insulation; (iii) passive heating; (iv) cooling elements; (v) thermal bridges;
(b) heating installation and domestic hot-water supply, including their insulation characteristics; (c) capacity of installed on-site renewable energy generation and energy storage; (d) air-conditioning installations; (e) natural and mechanical ventilation which may include air-tightness and heat recovery; (f) built-in lighting installation (mainly in the non-residential sector); (g) the design, positioning and orientation of the building, including outdoor climate; (h) passive solar systems and solar protection; (i) indoor climatic conditions, including the designed indoor climate; (j) internal loads; (k) building automation and control systems and their capabilities to monitor, control and optimise energy performance.
(a) local solar exposure conditions, active solar systems and other heating and electricity systems on the basis of energy from renewable sources; (b) electricity produced by cogeneration; (c) district or block heating and cooling systems; (d) natural lighting; (e) electrical storage systems; (f) thermal storage systems.
(a) single-family houses of different types; (b) apartment blocks; (c) offices; (d) educational buildings; (e) hospitals; (f) hotels and restaurants; (g) sports facilities; (h) wholesale and retail trade services buildings; (i) other types of energy-consuming buildings.
This Directive Article 3 | Mandatory indicators | Optional indicators |
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Definition of nearly-zero energy building for new and existing buildings | Overview of the legal and administrative framework | |
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The Member State’s contribution to the Union’s energy efficiency targets in accordance with Article 4 of Directive (EU) 2023/1791 attributable to its building stock’s renovation (share and figure in ktoe) | ||
The Member State’s contribution to the Union’s renewable energy targets in accordance with Directive (EU) 2018/2001 attributable to its building stock’s renovation (share, MW installed or GWh generated) | ||
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(a) the ability to maintain energy performance and operation of the building through the adaptation of energy consumption for example through use of energy from renewable sources; (b) the ability to adapt its operation mode in response to the needs of the occupant while paying due attention to the availability of user-friendliness, maintaining healthy indoor climate conditions and the ability to report on energy use; (c) the flexibility of a building’s overall energy demand, including its ability to enable participation in active and passive as well as implicit and explicit demand response, through its energy storage and release of energy back to the grid, for example through flexibility and load shifting capacities; and (d) the ability to improve its energy efficiency and overall performance through the use of energy-saving technologies.
(a) the interoperability between systems (smart meters, building automation and control systems, built-in home appliances, self-regulating devices for the regulation of indoor air temperature within the building and indoor air quality sensors and ventilations); and (b) the positive influence of existing communication networks, in particular the existence of high-speed-ready in-building physical infrastructure, such as the voluntary "broadband ready" label, and the existence of an access point for buildings with multiple residential building units, in accordance with Article 8 of Directive 2014/61/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council .Directive 2014/61/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council of 15 May 2014 on measures to reduce the cost of deploying high-speed electronic communications networks (OJ L 155, 23.5.2014, p. 1 ).
(a) the energy performance class; (b) the calculated annual primary energy use in kWh/(m 2 .y);(c) the calculated annual final energy use in kWh/(m 2 .y);(d) renewable energy produced on-site in % of energy use; (e) operational greenhouse gas emissions (kgCO 2 /(m2 .y)), and the value of the life-cycle GWP, if available.
(a) the calculated annual primary and final energy consumption in kWh or MWh; (b) renewable energy production in kWh or MWh; main energy carrier and type of renewable energy source; (c) the calculated energy needs in kWh/(m 2 .y);(d) a yes/no indication whether the building has a capacity to react to external signals and adjust the energy consumption; (e) a yes/no indication whether the heat distribution system inside the building is capable to work at low or more efficient temperature levels, where applicable; (f) the contact information of the relevant one-stop shop for renovation advice.
(a) energy use, peak load, size of generator or system, main energy carrier and main type of element for each of the uses: heating, cooling, domestic hot water, ventilation and in-built lighting; (b) the greenhouse gas emission class (if applicable); (c) information on carbon removals associated to the temporary storage of carbon in or on buildings; (d) a yes/no indication whether a renovation passport is available for the building; (e) the average U-value for the opaque elements of the building envelope; (f) the average U-value for the transparent elements of the building envelope; (g) type of most common transparent element (e.g. double-glazed window); (h) results of the analysis on overheating risk (if available); (i) the presence of fixed sensors that monitor the indoor environmental quality; (j) the presence of fixed controls that respond to the levels of indoor environmental quality; (k) number and type of recharging points for electric vehicles; (l) presence, type and size of energy storage systems; (m) expected remaining lifespan of the heating or air-conditioning systems and appliances, where applicable; (n) feasibility of adapting the heating system to operate at more efficient temperature settings; (o) feasibility of adapting the domestic hot-water system to operate at more efficient temperature settings; (p) feasibility of adapting the air-conditioning system to operate at more efficient temperature settings; (q) metered energy consumption; (r) whether there is a connection to a district heating and cooling network, and, if available, information about a potential connection to an efficient district heating and cooling system; (s) local primary energy factors and related carbon emission factors of the connected local district heating and cooling network; (t) operational fine particulate matter (PM ) emissions.2,5
(a) a yes/no indication whether a smart readiness assessment has been carried out for the building; (b) where available, the value of the smart readiness assessment; (c) a yes/no indication whether a Digital Building Logbook is available for the building.
(a) a validity check of the input data (including on-site checks) of the building used to issue the energy performance certificate and the results stated in the certificate; (b) the validity of the calculations; (c) a maximum deviation for the energy performance of a building, preferably expressed by the numeric indicator of primary energy use (kWh/(m 2 .y));(d) a minimum number of elements differing from default or standard values.
(a) the definition of a valid energy performance certificate; (b) quality objectives for the energy performance certificate scheme; (c) results of the quality assessment, including number of certificates evaluated and relative size to the total number of issued certificates in the given period (per typology); (d) contingency measures to improve the overall quality of energy performance certificates.
guidelines to accompany the comparative methodology framework; those guidelines will serve to enable the Member States to undertake the steps listed below, information on estimated long-term energy price developments.
define reference buildings that are characterised by and representative of their functionality and geographic location, including indoor and outdoor climate conditions. The reference buildings shall cover residential and non-residential buildings, both new and existing ones, define energy efficiency measures to be assessed for the reference buildings. Those may be measures for individual buildings as a whole, for individual building elements, or for a combination of building elements, assess the final and primary energy need and resulting emissions of the reference buildings with the defined energy efficiency measures applied, calculate the costs (i.e. the net present value) of the energy efficiency measures (as referred to in the second indent) during the expected economic life cycle applied to the reference buildings (as referred to in the first indent) by applying the comparative methodology framework principles.
(a) information on the current energy performance of the building; (b) a graphical representation or graphical representations of the roadmap and its steps for a staged deep renovation; (c) information on relevant national requirements such as minimum energy performance requirements for buildings, minimum energy performance standards and rules in the Member State on the phasing out of fossil-fuel used in buildings for heating and cooling, including application dates; (d) a succinct explanation on the optimal sequencing of steps; (e) information about each step, including: (i) the name and description of the renovation measures for the step, including relevant options for the technologies, techniques and materials to be used; (ii) the estimated energy savings in primary and final energy consumption, in kWh and in percentage improvement compared to the energy consumption prior to the step; (iii) the estimated reduction of operational greenhouse gas emissions; (iv) the estimated savings on the energy bill, clearly indicating the assumptions on energy costs used for the calculation; (v) the estimated energy performance class of the energy performance certificate to be achieved following completion of the step;
(f) information about a potential connection to an efficient district heating and cooling system; (g) the share of individual or collective generation and self-consumption of renewable energy estimated to be achieved after the renovation; (h) general information on available options for improving construction products’ circularity and for reducing their whole-life-cycle greenhouse gas emissions, as well as wider benefits related to health and comfort, indoor environmental quality and the improved adaptive capacity of the building to climate change; (i) information on available funding and links to the relevant web pages indicating the sources of such funding; (j) information on technical advice and advisory services, including contact details and links to the web pages of one-stop shops.
(a) an indicative timing of the steps; (b) for each step: (i) a detailed description of the technologies, techniques and materials to be used, their advantages, disadvantages and costs; (ii) how the energy performance of the building would compare to minimum energy performance requirements for buildings undergoing major renovation, nearly zero-energy building and zero-emission building requirements after completion of the step and how the energy performance of the building elements replaced would compare to minimum energy performance requirements for single building elements, where these exist; (iii) the estimated costs for carrying out the step; (iv) the estimated payback period for the step, with and without any available financial support; (v) the estimated time needed to carry out the step; (vi) where available, the reference values on the life-cycle greenhouse gas emissions for the materials and equipment and links to the relevant web pages where they can be found; (vii) the estimated lifetime of measures and the estimated maintenance costs;
(c) independent modules on: (i) the typical trades necessary or recommended for carrying out energy renovations (architects, advisors, contractors, suppliers and installer, etc.) or links to the relevant web pages; (ii) a list of relevant architects, advisors, contractors, suppliers or installers in the area, that may include only those fulfilling certain conditions such as matching higher qualification or certification labels or conditions, or links to the relevant web pages; (iii) the technical conditions needed for an optimal roll-out of low temperature heating; (iv) how the renovation steps and additional measures could improve the smart readiness of a building; (v) technical and safety requirements for materials and works; (vi) the underlying assumptions behind the calculations provided or links to the relevant web page where they can be found;
(d) information on how to access a digital version of the renovation passport; (e) any major renovations made to the building or building unit, as referred to in Article 8(1), and any retrofitting or replacement of a building element that forms part of the building envelope and which has a significant impact on the energy performance of the building envelope, as referred to in Article 8(2), where such information is made available to the expert carrying out the renovation passport; (f) information related to seismic safety, where such information relevant to the building is made available to the expert; (g) upon request of and on the basis of information made available by the current building owner, an attachment containing additional information, such as the adaptability of spaces to evolving needs and any planned renovations.
only Article 1 | |
only Article 53 |
Directive | Time-limit for transposition | Dates of application |
---|---|---|
2010/31/EU | ||
Directive 2010/31/EU | This Directive |
---|---|
Article 1 | Article 1 |
Article 2, point (1) | Article 2, point 1 |
— | Article 2, point (2) |
Article 2, point (2) | Article 2, point (3) |
— | Article 2, points (5) and (6) |
Article 2, points (3), (3a), (4) and (5) | Article 2, points (7) to (10) |
— | Article 2, points (12), (13) and (14) |
Article 2, points (6), (7), (8) and (9) | Article 2, points (15) to (18) |
— | Article 2, points (19) to (22) |
Article 2, point (10) | Article 2, point (23) |
— | Article 2, points (24) to (29) |
Article 2, points (11), (12), (13) and (14) | Article 2, points (30) to (33) |
— | Article 2, points (34), (37) to (40) and (42) |
Article 2, point (15) | Article 2, point (42) |
Article 2, points (15), (15a), (15b), (15c), (16) and (17) | Article 2, points (43), (44), (47) to (50) |
Article 2, point (18) | — |
Article 2, point (19) | Article 2, point (51) |
— | Article 2, points (52) to (64) |
Article 2, point (20) | — |
Article 2a | Article 3 |
Article 3 | Article 4 |
Article 4 | Article 5 |
Article 5 | Article 6 |
Articles 6 and 9 | Article 7 |
Article 7 | Article 8 |
— | Article 9 |
— | Article 12 |
Article 8(1), (9) | Article 13 |
Article 8(2) to (8) | Article 14 |
Article 8(10), (11) | Article 15 |
— | Article 16 |
Article 10 | Article 17 |
Article 11 | Article 19 |
Article 12 | Article 20 |
Article 13 | Article 21 |
— | Article 22 |
Articles 14 and 15 | Article 23 |
Article 16 | Article 24 |
Article 17 | Article 25 |
— | Article 26 |
Article 18 | Article 27 |
Article 19 | Article 28 |
Article 19a | — |
Article 20 | Article 29 |
Article 21 | Article 30 |
Article 22 | Article 31 |
Article 23 | Article 32 |
Article 26 | Article 33 |
Article 27 | Article 34 |
Article 28 | Article 35 |
Article 29 | Article 36 |
Article 30 | Article 37 |
Article 31 | Article 38 |
Annex I | Annex I |
— | Annex II |
— | Annex III |
Annex IA | Annex IV |
— | Annex V |
Annex II | Annex VI |
Annex III | Annex VII |
Annex IV | Annex IX |
Annex V | Annex X |