crossCert – Energy Performance Assessment and Certification of Buildings: The future of EPCs
The final crossCert Webinar presenting 3 years of research results
crossCert – New perspectives for impactful communication campaigns on energy-efficient renovations
In her recent study, Anne analysed trust and reliable information and how these are crucial in communicating using EPCs to boost energy-efficient renovations
crossCert – Funding Options for Energy-Efficient Building Renovations Across Europe
This webinar delved into funding schemes for energy-efficient building renovations and the significance of Energy Performance Certificates (EPCs) in accessing these subsidies
crossCert – Upgrading EPCs for new challenges – Do all EU countries have to prepare for the same costs of the EPBD
How do European-wide ambitions and targets “land” differently across different countries in their renovation efforts? Is it difficult to harmonise new approaches in building energy efficiency when the existing approaches are themselves not harmonised?
crossCert – Using the building certification methodology of another country: What have we learned?
This publication focused on the experiment of building energy performance certificates (EPCs) carried out in the crossCert project
crossCert – Identifying the case for next generation energy performance certificates
This paper documents the current variations of EPC frameworks across Europe and compares those with proposed next-generation EPC approaches from a range of European projects
crossCert – Energy performance certificates in Europe – their differences and why that matters
This paper reports on a cross-comparison of EPC methodologies to ascertain differences in numerical outputs and subsequent recommendations for buildings
crossCert – Energy performance certificate calculation methodologies across Europe and accommodating new performance indicators
The Horizon-funded crossCert project investigates how EPC methodologies differ across countries, highlighting the implications of these differences on the performance gap and what that means for future innovations