The excel calculation sheet also calculates heat loss from chimneys, air change per day (more air changes for old rooms vs new rooms) etc - it gives a value of W per room based on walls, doors, windows, chimneys, air circulation etc, which is based on the temperature difference between inside and outside - eg. 21 degrees inside and -4 outside.Ken wrote: ↑Thu Oct 26, 2023 12:28 pmYou do realise that the 15.5C is the outside temp and the starting point for calculating degree days. Basically they assume that at this temp no heating is required due to passive heating from occupants and sun.Countrypaul wrote: ↑Thu Oct 26, 2023 11:31 am When I was looking at figures for our refurb the degree days base figure always seemed quite arbitrary and yet can have a significant effect on the overall expected energy consumption. For example, a leaky building that is then made airtight will use less energy to heat - seems obvuous but nearly all the calculations you see assume a baseline of 15.5C in the UK. I found this article helpful: https://www.energylens.com/articles/deg ... re-problem - it is from a UK company I believe.
I think you need to look more closely at the SAP 2012 calculations which underpin the EPC ratings. Most installers start their quotes off by just using the EPC fig.
The SAP calculations take account of the locality and openings eg chimney, and vents but perhaps not so much leaky doors etc as it assumes these are airtight.
It also works out a total annual kWh usage for each room and each contributing part - but that is wholly based on the W/m2 and the degree days (based on 15.5 outside) it does not reflect the actual internal temperatures at all - which is the strange bit if you are trying to estimate your likely future usage. I guess this is similar to the EPC SAP calculation.
We actually had a new EPC done last week, which estimated around 26,000kWh per year (although that incorrectly assumed insulated cavity walls in 2 rooms)