Volume 7 l Issue 2 - July to September 2021

Page 90

ADVERTORIAL: SANEDI

SANEDI reminds building owners

to have their buildings rated for energy efficiency Building owners have two years to comply with new building energy performance regulations, which require a formal assessment of their building energy consumption. On 8 December 2020, the Department of Mineral Resources and Energy (DMRE) gazetted ‘Regulations for the Mandatory Display and Submission of Energy Performance Certificates for Buildings’. As an agency of the Department, the South African National Energy Development Institute (SANEDI) has been tasked with developing, hosting and maintaining a national Building Energy Performance Certificate Register in terms of these regulations. “SANEDI wants to help ensure compliance with the new regulations, so that building owners are not unnecessarily penalised,” explains SANEDI’s Barry Bredenkamp, General Manager Energy Efficiency & Corporate Communications. “Ultimately, it must be highlighted that the responsibility lies with building owners to ensure that they are compliant with the regulations.”

What do the new regulations mean?

Certain classes of buildings need to have their energy performance assessed by a South African National Accreditation System (SANAS) accredited inspection body, who will then issue an Energy Performance Certificate (EPC), rating the building from A–G for energy efficiency. “To be compliant, the EPC must be displayed at the building entrance, and a D-rating would typically indicate basic compliance with the energy efficiency component of the national building regulations. This first assessment will form the benchmark for the building and give the owner an idea of what needs to be done to improve the rating in the future. Everyone should aim for an A-rating in the longer term,” says Bredenkamp. EPCs need to be renewed every five years, giving

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sabusinessintegratrator.co.za

The Admin B building at Stellenbosch University, which houses the vice chancellor and executive team, received the first-ever EPC for a building in South Africa in February this year.

building owners the opportunity to improve their energy performance.

Which buildings need to comply, by when?

The current regulations apply to four different classes of buildings defined in the national Building Standard: 1. entertainment and public assembly facilities; 2. theatrical and indoor sports facilities; 3. places of instruction and offices with a net floor area of at least 2 000m2 in the private sector; and 4. 1 000m2 for buildings owned, operated or occupied by an organ of the state. These building must be compliant by 8 December 2022. “The national drive towards energy efficiency will unlock the wider value chain, as building owners look to implement more efficient systems. Economic activity will be stimulated, as building owners work towards achieving compliance in areas such as HVAC, lighting, building retrofit, energy monitoring and more energy-efficient appliances and equipment, to optimize and reduce energy usage. "This will involve engineering firms and other Energy Service Companies (ESCos), who will typically be contracted to do these energy efficiency upgrades, thereby creating much-needed job opportunities in the energy sector,” Bredenkamp concludes.

SANEDI

T +27 (0)11 038 4302 W www.sanedi.org.za


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Articles inside

Accelerating women in transport

3min
pages 96-97

Back on the road to professionalising the motor sector

3min
pages 98-100

Unlocking growth in the SME sector

4min
pages 92-95

buildings rated for energy efficiency

4min
pages 90-91

EWSETA poised to play important role in SA’s hydrogen roadmap

7min
pages 86-89

Time to rip off the band-aid – making remote working a viable long-term solution

5min
pages 82-85

POPIA 101

2min
pages 80-81

PASA a strategic entity of government in its goal of diversifying the energy mix

11min
pages 76-79

Technology ready to create SA’s mines of the future

4min
pages 74-75

What lies ahead for the future of print

6min
pages 70-73

The new reality for financial services

3min
pages 66-69

Normalising disabilities in the workplace

24min
pages 60-65

More needs to be done to connect the unconnected SA youth

5min
pages 58-59

Sisters are doing it for themselves in SA construction

3min
pages 50-51

Financial institutions should adopt a zero-trust approach to security

4min
pages 52-55

Cybercrimes Bill signed

2min
pages 56-57

Using employee engagement to drive call centre performance

4min
pages 46-49

E&T Minerals - Madiba's dream is no longer deferred

9min
pages 12-17

BPO – a critical element to ensure business continuity throughout the COVID-19 pandemic

5min
pages 42-45

South Africa B-BBEE developments: Clarity provided on black ownership schemes and structures

8min
pages 36-39

AI-powered solutions drive new business

3min
pages 18-21

Who is BIZCASH?

3min
pages 40-41

Accelerator Programme

3min
pages 30-31

Advertising to a generation that blocks advertising

3min
pages 22-25

B-BBEE is an opportunity for economic growth, not just a compliance exercise

3min
pages 26-29
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