@inproceedings{GokarakondaVenjakobThomasetal.2022, author = {Gokarakonda, Sriraj and Venjakob, Maike and Thomas, Stefan and Zogla, Gatis and Pricken, Cl{\´e}mence and Pej, Zs{\´o}fia}, title = {Harnessing energy performance certificates for deep energy renovation : policy recommendations and evidence from testing}, booktitle = {Agents of change : ECEEE 2022 summer study on energy efficiency ; 6-11 June 2022}, publisher = {European Council for an Energy Efficient Economy}, address = {Stockholm}, url = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:bsz:wup4-opus-80342}, pages = {1053 -- 1063}, year = {2022}, abstract = {To achieve the EU's energy efficiency targets, both the rate of building energy renovation and its depth, i.e., the amount of energy savings post renovation need to be improved. Energy Performance Certificates (EPCs) are key to make energy efficiency measures transparent for the building market and to promote the energy efficiency of buildings through renovation. The revision of the Energy Performance of Buildings Directive (EPBD) is seen as a pre-condition to meet the Renovation Wave objectives and to reach a highly energy efficient and decarbonized building stock by 2050. One focus of the current revision of the EPBD is therefore the improvement of EPCs. QualDeEPC - High-quality Energy Performance Assessment and Certification in Europe Accelerating Deep Energy Renovation, funded under the EU's Horizon 2020 programme, is a project that aims to improve EPCs. Following an EU-wide review of existing EPC schemes, and extensive stakeholder discussions in the seven partner countries, QualDeEPC found that EPCs and EPC schemes need to enhance particularly in the following three ways: 1. Establish a close link between EPCs and deep energy renovation 2. Improve the quality of EPC schemes, i.e., both the EPCs and their data, and the processes of assessment, certification, verification 3. Improve cross-EU convergence of EPC schemes.}, language = {en} }