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Better Buildings Neighborhood Program Single-Family Home Upgrade Project DatasetSource

Building project data for 75,110 single-family homes upgraded between July 1, 2010, and September 30, 2013 from the Better Building Neighborhood Program. This dataset includes a documentation file and three data tables. Reported data for some elements have been transformed and data for some upgraded homes have been omitted to protect privacy. See documentation file for details.

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No licence known
Tags:
ARRABBNPBetter Buildings Neighborhood ProgramRecovery ActUnited Statesbuildbuildingbuilding databuilding efficiencybuildingsbuiltdataefficiencyenergyenergy efficiencyhomeoutreachraw dataresidentialsing familysizespecificationsspecsyear
Formats:
HTMLCSV
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)over 1 year ago
BuildingsBench: A Large-Scale Dataset of 900K Buildings and Benchmark for Short-Term Load ForecastingSource

The BuildingsBench datasets consist of: - Buildings-900K: A large-scale dataset of 900K buildings for pretraining models on the task of short-term load forecasting (STLF). Buildings-900K is statistically representative of the entire U.S. building stock. - 7 real residential and commercial building datasets for benchmarking two downstream tasks evaluating generalization: zero-shot STLF and transfer learning for STLF. Buildings-900K can be used for pretraining models on day-ahead STLF for residential and commercial buildings. The specific gap it fills is the lack of large-scale and diverse time series datasets of sufficient size for studying pretraining and finetuning with scalable machine learning models. Buildings-900K consists of synthetically generated energy consumption time series. It is derived from the NREL End-Use Load Profiles (EULP) dataset (see link to this database in the links further below). However, the EULP was not originally developed for the purpose of STLF. Rather, it was developed to "...help electric utilities, grid operators, manufacturers, government entities, and research organizations make critical decisions about prioritizing research and development, utility resource and distribution system planning, and state and local energy planning and regulation." Similar to the EULP, Buildings-900K is a collection of Parquet files and it follows nearly the same Parquet dataset organization as the EULP. As it only contains a single energy consumption time series per building, it is much smaller (~110 GB). BuildingsBench also provides an evaluation benchmark that is a collection of various open source residential and commercial real building energy consumption datasets. The evaluation datasets, which are provided alongside Buildings-900K below, are collections of CSV files which contain annual energy consumption. The size of the evaluation datasets altogether is less than 1GB, and they are listed out below: 1. ElectricityLoadDiagrams20112014 2. Building Data Genome Project-2 3. Individual household electric power consumption (Sceaux) 4. Borealis 5. SMART 6. IDEAL 7. Low Carbon London

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No licence known
Tags:
EULPSTLFbenchmarkbuildingscommercialdatasetdeep learningend use load profilesenergyload forecastingmachine learningpowerpretrainingprocessed dataresidentialshort-termtransfer learning
Formats:
HTMLmdGZ
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)over 1 year ago
City and County Energy ProfilesSource

The City and County Energy Profiles lookup table provides modeled electricity and natural gas consumption and expenditures, on-road vehicle fuel consumption, vehicle miles traveled, and associated emissions for each U.S. city and county. Please note this data is modeled and more precise data may be available from regional, state, or other sources. The modeling approach for electricity and natural gas is described in Sector-Specific Methodologies for Subnational Energy Modeling: https://www.nrel.gov/docs/fy19osti/72748.pdf. This data is part of a suite of state and local energy profile data available at the "State and Local Energy Profile Data Suite" link below and builds on Cities-LEAP energy modeling, available at the "EERE Cities-LEAP Page" link below. Examples of how to use the data to inform energy planning can be found at the "Example Uses" link below.

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No licence known
Tags:
Cities-LEAPCityCountyDieselElectricityEmissionsEnergy ProfilesGasolineNatural GasUSUnited Statescommercialconsumptioncountryenergyexampleexpendituresfuel consumptionindustrialplanningresidentialstatetransportationvehicle
Formats:
XLSBHTML
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)over 1 year ago
Consumption & Efficiency Data and StatisticsSource

Data and statistics on energy consumption in homes, commercial buildings, manufacturing, and transportation. Data released monthly or annually.

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No licence known
Tags:
buildingscommercialcommercial energy costcommercial energy usehome energy costhome energy usehomeshouseshousing characteristicsindustrialindustrymanufacturingmanufacturing energy consumptionresidentialtransportation energy
Formats:
The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)11 months ago
DLR Residential Land Availability 2014Source

DLR Residential Land Availability 2014

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No licence known
Tags:
Planning and Land Uselandresidential
Formats:
JSONDB_TABLEWMS
data.gov.ie8 months ago
Demand Response Across the Continental US for 2006Source

This project estimates hourly demand response availability across the continental U.S. for the year 2006. The resulting data set is disaggregated by balancing authority area, end use, and grid application. End uses include 14 categories across residential, commercial, industrial and municipal sectors. Grid applications include the 5 bulk power system services of regulation reserve, flexibility (or ramping) reserve, contingency reserve, energy, and capacity. Based on the physical requirements of the various bulk power system services and the estimated end use electric load shapes, potential availability of demand response is calculated and provided as a series of csv files.

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No licence known
Tags:
building demandcommercialdemanddemand responseelectric demandelectric loadend useenergyenergy demandgridgrid applicationsindustrialloadpowerresidentialsmart grid
Formats:
PPTXCSVTXTGZZIP
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)over 1 year ago
End-Use Load Profiles for the U.S. Building StockSource

The United States is embarking on an ambitious transition to a 100% clean energy economy by 2050, which will require improving the flexibility of electric grids. One way to achieve grid flexibility is to shed or shift demand to align with changing grid needs. To facilitate this, it is critical to understand how and when energy is used. High quality end-use load profiles (EULPs) provide this information, and can help cities, states, and utilities understand the time-sensitive value of energy efficiency, demand response, and distributed energy resources. Publicly available EULPs have traditionally had limited application because of age and incomplete geographic representation. To help fill this gap, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) funded a three-year project, End-Use Load Profiles for the U.S. Building Stock, that culminated in this publicly available dataset of calibrated and validated 15-minute resolution load profiles for all major residential and commercial building types and end uses, across all climate regions in the United States. These EULPs were created by calibrating the ResStock and ComStock physics-based building stock models using many different measured datasets, as described in the "Technical Report Documenting Methodology" linked in the submission.

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No licence known
Tags:
Building StockComStockEULPEnd Use Load ProfilesResStockUS Building Stockbuildingbuilding efficiencybuilding sciencebuildingscommercialdemand responseelectricityend useenergygridgrid flexibilityloadload profileload profilesload shapemodelsnatural gaspowerresidential
Formats:
HTMLPDFmd
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)over 1 year ago
Housing Census 2021Source

Office for National Statistics - Housing Census map provides a comprehensive insight into the various types of homes and the people living in them in England and Wales.

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UK Open Government Licence (OGL)
Tags:
EnglandWalesbuildingcensushomeresidential
Formats:
HTMLPDF
Office for National Statistics (ONS)over 1 year ago
IBNET Benchmarking DatabaseSource

Data on water utilities for 151 national jurisdictions, for a range of years up to and including 2017 (year range varies greatly by country and utility) on service and utility parameters (Benchmark Database) and Tariffs for 211 juristictions (Tariffs database). Information includes cost recovery, connections, population served, financial performance, non-revenue water, residential and total supply, total production. Data can be called up by utility, by group of utility, and by comparison between utilities, including the whole (global) utility database, enabling both country and global level comparison for individual utilities. Data can be downloaded in xls format.

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Creative Commons Attribution
Tags:
apgarbenchmarkbillingconsumptioncostscountrycoveragefinancialnetworkproductionqualityresidential
Formats:
XLS
IBNETover 1 year ago
Mechanical Ventilation and Indoor Air Quality in Recently Constructed U.S. Homes in Marine and Cold-Dry Climates Data from Building America ProjectSource

Data were collected to characterize whole-house mechanical ventilation (WHMV) and indoor air quality (IAQ) in 55 homes in the Marine climate of Oregon and Cold-Dry climate of Colorado in the U.S. Sixteen homes were monitored for two weeks, with and without WHMV operating. Ventilation airflows; airtightness; time-resolved CO2, PM2.5 and radon; and time-integrated NO2, NOX and formaldehyde were measured. Participants provided information about IAQ-impacting activities, perceptions and ventilation use. All homes had operational cooktop ventilation and bathroom exhaust. Thirty homes had equipment that could meet the ASHRAE 62.2-2010 standard with continuous or controlled runtime and 34 had some WHMV operating as found. Thirty-five of 46 participants with WHMV reported they did not know how to operate it, and only half of the systems were properly labeled. Two-week homes had lower formaldehyde, radon, CO2, and NO (NOX-NO2) when operated with WHMV; and also had faster PM2.5 decays following indoor emission events. Overall IAQ satisfaction was similar in Oregon and Colorado, but more Colorado participants (19 vs. 3%) felt their IAQ could be improved and more reported dryness as a problem (58 vs. 14%). The collected data indicate that there are benefits of operating WHMV, even when continuous use may not be needed because outdoor pollutant concentrations are low and indoor sources do not present substantial challenges.

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No licence known
Tags:
Building AmericaCarbon dioxideFine particulate matterFormaldehydeHome performanceIAQIAQ satisfactionVentilation standardsWHMVair qualitybuildings efficiencychemistryenergy analysisfield studyhome ventilationindoor air qualitykitchen ventilationmechanical ventilationnitrogen oxidesoccupant activityresidentialwhole house mechanical ventilationwhole-house
Formats:
ZIPDOCX
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)over 1 year ago
Renewable Electricity Procurement Options Data (RE-POD)Source

The Renewable Electricity Procurement Options Data (RE-POD) is an aggregated dataset meant to help local jurisdictions and utility customers within those jurisdictions understand the options that may be available to them to procure renewable electricity or renewable energy credits to meet energy goals. This data is part of a suite of state and local energy profile data available at the "State and Local Energy Profile Data Suite" link below and builds on Cities-LEAP energy modeling, available at the "EERE Cities-LEAP Page" link below. Examples of how to use the data to inform energy planning can be found at the "Example Uses" link below.

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No licence known
Tags:
Cities-LEAPCityCountyElectricityFranchise AgreementGreen PowerMunicipalProcurementRE-PODRenewablecommercialenergyexampleoptionsplanningpowerresidentialsolarutilitywind
Formats:
XLSXHTML
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)over 1 year ago
School Breakfast ProgramSource

The School Breakfast Program (SBP) provides reimbursement to states to operate nonprofit breakfast programs in schools and residential childcare institutions. The Food and Nutrition Service administers the SBP at the federal level. State education agencies administer the SBP at the state level, and local school food authorities operate the program in schools.

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No licence known
Tags:
SPBSchoolbreakfastchildcareinstitutionsprogramreimbursementresidentialstate
Formats:
United States Department of Agriculture10 months ago
State Energy Efficient Appliance Rebate Program (SEEARP) ReportsSource

The State Energy Efficient Appliance Rebate Program (SEEARP) reports database includes rebate reports (xls) and summary factsheets (pdf) from states and territories that participated in SEEARP. With funding provided by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA), the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) developed SEEARP to spur economic activity and invest in long-term energy savings by helping consumers replace older, inefficient appliances with new, efficient models. SEEARP provided almost $300 million to the 56 U.S. states and territories to support state-level consumer rebate programs for efficient appliances from December 1, 2009 to February 17, 2012. The successes and challenges of SEEARP provide valuable lessons for designing and running a consumer-focused appliance rebate program. In addition to the SEEARP reports database, the two reports included provide a results and program design lessons.

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No licence known
Tags:
ARRAEnergy EfficiencyEnergy StarSEEARPappliancesbuildingsenergyenergy savingincentivesrebatesreportsresidential
Formats:
ZIPPDF
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)over 1 year ago
Tracking the SunSource

Berkeley Lab's Tracking the Sun report series is dedicated to summarizing installed prices and other trends among grid-connected, distributed solar photovoltaic (PV) systems in the United States. The present report, the 11th edition in the series, focuses on systems installed through year-end 2017, with preliminary trends for the first half of 2018. As in years past, the primary emphasis is on describing changes in installed prices over time and variation in pricing across projects based on location, project ownership, system design, and other attributes. New to this year, however, is an expanded discussion of other project characteristics in the large underlying data sample. Future editions will include more of such material, beyond the reports traditional focus on installed pricing. The trends described in this report derive primarily from project-level data reported to state agencies and utilities that administer PV incentive programs, solar renewable energy credit (SREC) registration systems, or interconnection processes. In total, data were collected and cleaned for more than 1.3 million individual PV systems, representing 81% of U.S. residential and non-residential PV systems installed through 2017. The analysis of installed pricing trends is based on a subset of roughly 770,000 systems with available installed price data.

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No licence known
Tags:
PVenergygridinstalled pricenon-residentialoediphotovoltaicpowerpv installationsresidentialsolartracking the sun
Formats:
HTMLmdPDF
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)over 1 year ago
U.S. Heat Demand by Sector for Potential Application of Direct Use GeothermalSource

This dataset includes heat demand for potential application of direct use geothermal broken down into 4 sectors: agricultural, commercial, manufacturing and residential. The data for each sector are organized by county, were disaggregated specifically to assess the market demand for geothermal direct use, and were derived using methodologies customized for each sector based on the availability of data and other sector-specific factors. This dataset also includes a paper containing a full explanation of the methodologies used.

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No licence known
Tags:
Geothermal Vision StudyGleasonMcCabeReberUSUnited StatesYoungagriculturalagriculturecharacterizationcommercialdirect usegeothermalgeovisionheat demandheat demand by countyheat demand by sectorlow-templow-temperaturemanufacturingpotential applicationresidentialthermal demand
Formats:
XLSXDOCX
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)over 1 year ago