Cost Benefits of Net Zero Energy Homes in Australia
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Analysis Approach
- Step 1: Development of baseline home model. In this first phase of the analysis, an energy model is developed and validated using the characteristics as well as the energy usage data for an existing home designed as a demonstration of a zero-emission house [24]. The energy performance of the baseline home is assessed for four cities (i.e., Melbourne, Perth, Brisbane, and Darwin) located in different climate zones in Australia.
- Step 2: Analysis of individual energy efficiency measures. This phase involves a series of parametric analyses to assess the energy efficiency as well as the cost-effectiveness of diverse design strategies using the home energy model developed and validated in Step 1. The considered design strategies include building envelope measures (i.e., insulating the walls and ceiling, deploying alternatives for glazing options, and reducing the air leakage levels), energy-intensive systems (i.e., heating, ventilating, and air conditioning or HVAC equipment and their temperature settings as well as hot water heaters), and building integrated solar systems (i.e., rooftop PV panels, and solar water heaters).
- Step 3: Optimization of zero net home designs. Based upon the results of the sensitivity analysis completed in Step 2, a multi-objective optimization analysis is carried out to determine the cost-optimal designs for achieving NZE homes in four Australian climates considered in this study. The optimization is based on maximizing energy efficiency while maintaining acceptable indoor thermal comfort levels and minimizing the life cycle costs to account for the capital costs, operating costs, maintenance costs, and replacement costs throughout the home’s life cycle.
2.1. Baseline Energy Model
2.2. Description of Selected Australian Climates
2.3. Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Strategies
3. Sensitivity Analysis Results
3.1. Impact of Wall/Ceiling Insulation
3.1.1. Energy Performance Analysis
- In Melbourne, when thermal insulation is added to an uninsulated design of the baseline house (i.e., no thermal insulation in the walls and ceiling), the heating/cooling energy end-use is reduced by 11.1% for R-2.5 in the walls only and by 41.7% for R-2.5 in the ceiling only. However, adding R-4 thermal insulation in the walls results in 12.8% savings in the annual HVAC energy use, representing an extra 1.7% reduction compared to the R-2.5 wall thermal insulation case. Similarly, doubling the ceiling thermal insulation to R-5 incurs a 46.0% reduction in the HVAC energy consumption, that is, 4.3% extra savings compared to the R-2.5 ceiling thermal insulation case.
- When the house is in Perth, the impact of the walls’ thermal insulation is even less effective than the ceiling’s insulation. Indeed, R-2.5 thermal insulation results in reductions of the annual HVAC energy end-use of 6.1% when added to the walls and 44.3% when installed in the ceiling for the uninsulated case of the baseline house.
- In Brisbane, most of the potential reductions in HVAC energy consumption associated with insulating the envelope components can be achieved by R-2.5 thermal insulation placed in the ceiling. Any higher thermal insulation levels placed in the walls and ceiling have limited impacts in decreasing further the energy demands of the HVAC system. When R-6 and R-4 thermal insulations are placed in the ceiling and walls, respectively, only a 5.4% incremental reduction in HVAC energy end-use can be achieved relative to the case of R-2.5 ceiling-only thermal insulation, which leads to 37.2% savings.
- In Darwin, which is characterized by a hot and humid climate, the addition of low levels of thermal insulation in both walls (R-2) and ceiling (R-2.5) can achieve most of the HVAC energy reduction potential estimated at 25.5%, which is higher than 19.6% attained when R-2.5 ceiling thermal insulation only is used and slightly lower than 28.8% achieved when R-6.0 ceiling and R-4.0 wall thermal insulations are considered.
3.1.2. Economic Analysis
3.2. Impact of Window Glazing
3.2.1. Energy Performance Analysis
3.2.2. Economic Analysis
3.3. Impact of Air Infiltration
3.3.1. Energy Performance Analysis
3.3.2. Economic Analysis
3.4. Impact of Temperature Settings
3.4.1. Effect of Cooling Temperature Settings
3.4.2. Effect of Heating Temperature Settings
3.4.3. Economic Analysis
3.5. Impact of HVAC Energy Efficiency
3.5.1. Energy Performance Analysis
3.5.2. Economic Analysis
3.6. Impact of Water Heaters
3.6.1. Energy Performance Analysis
3.6.2. Economic Analysis
3.7. Benefits of PV Systems
4. Optimization Analysis
4.1. Energy Efficiency vs. Renewable Energy
4.2. Impact of Temperature Settings
4.3. Impact of Climate
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Nomenclature
ACH | air change per hour |
ASHRAE | American Society for Heating, Refrigerating, and Air Conditioning Engineers |
AUD | Australian Dollar |
CDD | cooling degree-days [°C-day] |
COP | coefficient of performance |
EER | electric efficiency ratio |
GHG | greenhouse gas |
HDD | heating degree-days [°C-day] |
HPWH | heat pump water heater |
HSPF | heating seasonal performance factor |
HVAC | heating, ventilating, and air conditioning |
LCC | life cycle cost |
NCC | national construction code |
NZE | net zero energy |
PV | photovoltaic |
SEER | seasonal electric efficiency ratio |
SWH | solar water heater |
ZEH | zero emissions house |
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Element | Description | Comments |
---|---|---|
Floor area | 240 m2 including 40 m2 garage | Garage is unconditioned |
Number of occupants | 6 people | The house has 4 bedrooms but was occupied by 6 people during the monitoring period |
Orientation | North | North Façade maximizes solar exposure |
Walls | Brick Veneer + 90 mm studs with R-2.5 thermal insulation + 10 mm plasterboard | U-value = 0.34 W/m2·°C The outdoor surface has a medium color. |
Ceiling | R-6.0 Batt thermal insulation + 13-mm plasterboard | U-value = 0.14 W/m2·°C. Highly insulated ceiling to achieve an 8-star rating |
Floor | R-1.0 insulated waffle pod slab | House has a slab-on-grade floor |
Windows | Timber frames with double pane glazing filled with Argon | U-value = 2.36 W/m2·°C; SHGC = 0.58 |
Lighting | Mostly LED fixtures with some CFL downlights. | Lighting end-use has been monitored and used for setting lighting use |
Appliances | All appliances are electric, including oven, refrigerator, dishwasher, clothes washer, and other plug-in equipment (TVs, computers, and hair dryers) | End-uses for all appliances and plug-load were monitored and used for defining their operation schedules. |
Heating/cooling system | Heat Pump with 15 kW cooling capacity and 16.3 kW heating capacity | No energy efficiency ratings are provided. For the model, nominal COPs of 4.1 for cooling and 2.2 for heating are used. |
Indoor temperature settings | Summer: 23 °C for 24-h/day Winter: 21 °C in living room and 20.5 °C in bedrooms for 24-h/day | During the monitoring period, the house is always occupied. |
Domestic hot water system | 4 m2 solar heater with an electric booster | The electric booster is mostly needed during the winter |
End-Use | Model Predictions (kWh/Year) | Measurements (kWh/Year) | Difference (%) |
---|---|---|---|
HVAC | 4227 | 4438 | 4.8% |
Lighting | 334 | 344 | 2.9% |
Hot water | 3215 | 3209 | −0.2% |
Appliances/plug load | 4375 | 4289 | −2.0% |
Total | 12,151 | 12,280 | 1.1% |
Site | Latitude * | Longitude | Climate Zone | Climate Type | CDD (18 °C) | HDD (18 °C) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Darwin | −12.5° | 130.8° | 1 | Hot humid summer, warm winter | 3348 | 0 |
Brisbane | −27.5° | 153.0° | 2 | Warm humid summer, mild winter | 1024 | 333 |
Perth | −34.0° | 115.9° | 5 | Warm temperate | 767 | 782 |
Melbourne | −37.8° | 144.9° | 6 | Mild temperate | 236 | 1731 |
Strategy | Melbourne | Perth | Brisbane | Darwin |
---|---|---|---|---|
No action is needed | 8.9 | 22.0 | 19.4 | 6.1 |
Deploy solar shading | 4.2 | 11.5 | 16.6 | 33.1 |
Use evaporative cooling | 4.2 | 12.9 | 2.9 | 12.0 |
Cool by natural ventilation | 1.4 | 3.7 | 1.4 | 3.7 |
Use an active cooling system | 0.8 | 1.8 | 7.5 | 59.9 |
Use an active heating system | 87.0 | 66.4 | 43.3 | 1.7 |
Strategies | Options | Costs | Comments/References |
---|---|---|---|
Walls Thermal Insulation | R-0 | 0 | Costs are based on a survey of retail prices [30] |
R-2.0 | 5.81 AUD/m2 | ||
R-2.5 | 11.17 AUD/m2 | ||
R-4.0 | 23.72 AUD/m2 | ||
Ceiling Thermal Insulation | R-0 | 0 | Costs are based on a survey of retail prices [30] |
R-2.5 | 6.48 AUD/m2 | ||
R-3.5 | 8.77 AUD/m2 | ||
R-4.1 | 10.53 AUD/m2 | ||
R-5.0 | 15.54 AUD/m2 | ||
R-6.0 | 19.85 AUD/m2 | ||
Glazing Type | Clear single | 200 AUD/m2 | Costs are based on a survey of retail prices [31] |
Clear double | 280 AUD/m2 | ||
Low-E double | 310 AUD/m2 | ||
Low-E double with thermal break | 350 AUD/m2 | ||
Level of Airtightness | 15 ACH | 1.33 AUD/m2 | ACH at 50 Pa Costs per conditioned floor area from BEOpt database [32], adjusted for labor costs * |
10 ACH | 2.50 AUD/m2 | ||
5 ACH | 4.51 AUD/m2 | ||
1 ACH | 9.17 AUD/m2 | ||
Temperature Settings | Cooling setpoints | 0 | Refer to Section 3.6.1 |
Heating setpoints | 0 | Refer to Section 3.6.2 | |
Air Conditioning Systems | Low efficiency | 550 + 226 * kW | Costs are based on local distribution prices [33] and BEOpt cost models [32], adjusted for labor costs * |
Standard efficiency | 3912 + 226 * kW | ||
High efficiency | 5083 + 226 * kW | ||
Premium efficiency | 6119 + 226 * kW | ||
Hot Water Heaters | Electric tank | 680 AUD | Costs are specific for 4 m2 solar collectors, and 160 L tank costs are based on BEOpt database [32], adjusted for labor costs * |
Heat pump water Heater | 11,696 AUD | ||
Solar water heater with elect. tank | 2162 AUD | ||
Solar water weater with HPWH | 13,031 AUD | ||
Rooftop PV Systems | Sizes between 3 kW and 10 kW | Cost depends on city | Refer to Section 3.7 for specific installation costs from [34] |
Ceiling R-Value (°C.m2/W) | Wall Thermal Insulation R-Value (°C.m2/W) | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0 | 2 | 2.5 | 4 | 0 | 2 | 2.5 | 4 | |
Melbourne (Climate Zone 6) | Perth (Climate Zone 5) | |||||||
0 | 3.7 | 6.6 | 12.2 | 7.6 | 13.7 | 22.0 | ||
2.5 | 1.0 | 1.5 | 2.1 | 3.4 | 1.1 | 1.9 | 2.7 | 4.5 |
3.5 | 1.3 | 1.7 | 2.3 | 3.6 | 1.5 | 2.1 | 2.9 | 4.7 |
4.1 | 1.5 | 1.8 | 2.4 | 3.7 | 1.7 | 2.3 | 3.1 | 4.8 |
5 | 2.2 | 2.4 | 2.9 | 4.2 | 2.5 | 3.0 | 3.7 | 5.4 |
6 | 2.8 | 2.8 | 3.3 | 4.6 | 3.1 | 3.5 | 4.2 | 5.9 |
Brisbane (climate zone 2) | Darwin (climate zone 1) | |||||||
0 | 13.1 | 23.6 | 33.7 | 4.4 | 7.8 | 15.0 | ||
2.5 | 1.3 | 2.4 | 3.4 | 5.8 | 1.2 | 1.8 | 2.5 | 4.1 |
3.5 | 1.8 | 2.8 | 3.8 | 6.1 | 1.6 | 2.0 | 2.7 | 4.3 |
4.1 | 2.0 | 3.0 | 4.0 | 6.3 | 1.8 | 2.2 | 2.9 | 4.4 |
5 | 2.9 | 3.9 | 4.9 | 7.2 | 2.6 | 2.8 | 3.5 | 5.0 |
6 | 3.7 | 4.7 | 5.6 | 7.9 | 3.3 | 3.4 | 4.0 | 5.5 |
Ceiling R-Value (°C.m2/W) | Wall Thermal Insulation R-value (°C.m2/W) | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0 | 2 | 2.5 | 4 | 0 | 2 | 2.5 | 4 | |
Melbourne (Climate Zone 6) | Perth (Climate Zone 5) | |||||||
0 | 81,360 | 74,169 | 74,610 | 75,891 | 67,864 | 64,998 | 65,821 | 67,027 |
2.5 | 48,762 | 39,285 | 39,537 | 40,924 | 39,129 | 35,412 | 36,290 | 38,238 |
3.5 | 48,570 | 38,634 | 38,833 | 40,273 | 38,376 | 34,907 | 35,769 | 37,756 |
4.1 | 46,960 | 37,806 | 37,705 | 39,491 | 37,376 | 34,007 | 34,831 | 36,933 |
5 | 47,152 | 37,976 | 38,191 | 39,307 | 37,691 | 34,330 | 35,076 | 37,187 |
6 | 47,442 | 37,920 | 38,134 | 39,656 | 37,940 | 34,680 | 35,604 | 37,661 |
Brisbane (climate zone 2) | Darwin (climate zone 1) | |||||||
0 | 68,732 | 67,569 | 68,523 | 69,895 | 142,503 | 136,720 | 137,195 | 138,998 |
2.5 | 44,518 | 43,863 | 44,964 | 47,180 | 115,388 | 108,055 | 108,376 | 110,002 |
3.5 | 44,183 | 43,786 | 44,887 | 47,126 | 114,752 | 107,440 | 107,782 | 109,422 |
4.1 | 43,560 | 43,639 | 44,748 | 47,089 | 113,683 | 106,526 | 106,875 | 108,529 |
5 | 43,994 | 44,260 | 45,338 | 47,702 | 114,196 | 106,793 | 107,135 | 108,831 |
6 | 44,714 | 44,956 | 46,035 | 48,398 | 115,079 | 107,676 | 108,018 | 109,715 |
U-Value Bins (W/m2.K) | Existing Houses | New Houses | SHGC Bins | Existing Houses | New Houses |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Below 2.0 | 0.1% | 0.6% | Below 0.20 | 0.0% | 0.3% |
2.0–3.0 | 0.8% | 3.6% | 0.20–0.30 | 0.0% | 1.0% |
3.0–4.0 | 2.2% | 12.3% | 0.30–0.40 | 0.8% | 6.8% |
4.0–5.0 | 54.1% | 16.8% | 0.40–0.50 | 53.3% | 25.8% |
5.0–6.0 | 15.2% | 25.0% | 0.50–0.60 | 44.3% | 48.9% |
Above 6.0 | 27.6% | 49.8% | Above 0.60 | 1.5% | 17.2% |
Glazing Type | U-Value (W/m2.K) | SHGC | Cost (AUD/m2) |
---|---|---|---|
Clear single pane | 6.1 | 0.75 | 200 |
Clear double pane | 3.5 | 0.64 | 280 |
Low-E double pane | 2.4 | 0.53 | 310 |
Low-E double pane with thermal breaks | 1.9 | 0.53 | 350 |
City | Thermal Insulation R-Values for Walls/Ceiling (°C.m2/W) | Glazing Type | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Clear Single | Clear Double | Low-E Double | Low-E Double with Thermal Break | ||
Melbourne | R-0/R-0 | -- | 4.6 | 11.3 | 13.8 |
R-2.5/R-6 | -- | 4.2 | 11.3 | 12.3 | |
Perth | R-0/R-0 | -- | 5.0 | 12.0 | 15.5 |
R-2.5/R-6 | -- | 4.4 | 10.8 | 14.8 | |
Brisbane | R-0/R-0 | -- | 4.8 | 11.6 | 17.3 |
R-2.5/R-6 | -- | 4.9 | 10.7 | 17.4 | |
Darwin | R-0/R-0 | -- | 3.5 | 8.4 | 11.3 |
R-2.5/R-6 | -- | 2.5 | 6.1 | 8.2 |
City | R-Values for Walls/Ceiling (°C.m2/W) | Glazing Type | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Clear Single | Clear Double | Low-E Double | Low-E Double with Thermal Break | ||
Melbourne | R-0/R-0 | 94,100 | 91,150 | 90,822 | 91,045 |
R-2.5/R-6 | 44,944 | 41,663 | 41,650 | 41,054 | |
Perth | R-0/R-0 | 79,920 | 77,278 | 76,978 | 77,567 |
R-2.5/R-6 | 41,851 | 38,753 | 38,275 | 39,220 | |
Brisbane | R-0/R-0 | 81,016 | 78,210 | 77,850 | 79,125 |
R-2.5/R-6 | 52,218 | 49,444 | 48,600 | 50,374 | |
Darwin | R-0/R-0 | 156,956 | 152,869 | 151,586 | 152,413 |
R-2.5/R-6 | 118,703 | 112,742 | 110,311 | 111,061 |
City | Lifetime Period (Years) | Air Infiltration Rate | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
15 ACH | 10 ACH | 5 ACH | 1 ACH | ||
Melbourne | 30 | 27,819 | 26,561 | 26,107 | 30,009 |
50 | 36,433 | 34,706 | 33,981 | 38,804 | |
Perth | 30 | 25,435 | 26,469 | 28,931 | 34,919 |
50 | 33,304 | 34,585 | 37,688 | 45,249 | |
Brisbane | 30 | 32,876 | 33,262 | 35,426 | 41,116 |
50 | 43,071 | 43,503 | 46,214 | 53,385 | |
Darwin | 30 | 86,748 | 83,955 | 81,541 | 83,834 |
50 | 113,790 | 110,048 | 106,751 | 109,461 |
City | HVAC Efficiency Level | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Low-Eff | Std-Eff | High-Eff | Prem-Eff | |
Melbourne | -- | 5.46 | 5.05 | 5.16 |
Perth | -- | 5.70 | 5.62 | 5.46 |
Brisbane | -- | 4.34 | 4.05 | 3.80 |
Darwin | -- | 1.84 | 1.71 | 1.72 |
City | Lifetime Period (Years) | Water Heater Types | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Elect. Tank | SWH + Elect. Tank | HPWH | SWH + HPHW | ||
Melbourne | 30 | 54,513 | 46,885 | 44,110 | 48,584 |
50 | 71,492 | 62,300 | 57,690 | 63,966 | |
Perth | 30 | 50,141 | 40,968 | 36,632 | 43,810 |
50 | 65,753 | 54,533 | 47,873 | 57,699 | |
Brisbane | 30 | 59,408 | 47,251 | 45,310 | 51,636 |
50 | 77,919 | 62,781 | 59,266 | 67,973 | |
Darwin | 30 | 93,524 | 90,216 | 83,551 | 95,949 |
50 | 122,703 | 112,811 | 109,464 | 121,664 |
PV Size | 3 kW | 4 kW | 5 kW | 6 kW | 7 kW | 10 kW |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Melbourne | 4430 | 4790 | 5370 | 5800 | 6620 | 8930 |
Perth | 3290 | 3590 | 4480 | 5420 | 5920 | 9760 |
Brisbane | 3930 | 4540 | 5110 | 5870 | 6630 | 9640 |
Darwin | 5300 | 7210 | 8240 | 9920 | 11,270 | 14,060 |
Site | Optimal Tilt (Degrees) | Electricity Generation (kWh/Year) | Installation Cost * (AUD) | Annual Potential Benefit (AUD/Year) | Simple Payback (Years) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Melbourne | 30 | 1358 | 1477 | 397 | 3.7 |
Perth | 25 | 1689 | 1097 | 508 | 2.2 |
Brisbane | 25 | 1595 | 1310 | 484 | 2.7 |
Darwin | 15 | 1682 | 1767 | 460 | 3.8 |
Performance Indicators | Baseline Design | Optimal Design Using EEMs Only | Optimal NZE Using EEMs and PV |
---|---|---|---|
List of EEMs | R-2.5 Walls, R-6 Ceiling, Low-E Double Glazing, 15 ACH 50, 4-m2 SWH, Elect. Tank, Std Eff HP | R-4 Walls, R-6 Ceiling, Low-E Double Glazing, 15 ACH 50, No SWH, HPWH, Std Eff HP | R-2.5 Walls, R-4.1 Ceiling, Low-E Double Glazing, 10 ACH 50, No SWH, HPWH, Std Eff HP |
PV size at design (kW) | 0 | 0 | 7 |
Energy consumption (kWh/year) | 10,487 | 9704 | 9903 |
HVAC capacity (kW) | 12.2 | 12.0 | 11.5 |
Energy savings vs. baseline (%) | 0.0% | 7.5% | 5.6% |
Overall LCC at design (AUD) | 148,000 | 91,500 | 93,000 |
Incremental costs—baseline (AUD) | 0 | −6789 | −2048 |
Additional rooftop size for NZE (kW) | 7.3 | 6.7 | 0 |
Additional PV costs—NZE (AUD) | 6304 | 5770 | 0 |
Overall LCC at NZE (AUD) | 151,600 | 94,800 | 93,000 |
Performance Indicators | Cooling Temperature Setpoint (°C) | ||
---|---|---|---|
21 | 23 | 25 | |
List of EEMs | R-2 Walls, R-4.1 Ceiling, Low-E Double Glazing, 15 ACH 50, HPWH, No SWH, Prem Eff HP | R-2.5 Walls, R-4.1 Ceiling, Low-E Double Glazing, 10 ACH 50, HPWH, No SWH, Std Eff HP | R-2 Walls, R-2.5 Ceiling, Low-E Double Glazing, 10 ACH 50, HPWH, no SWH, Std Eff HP |
PV size for NZE design (kW) | 7 | 7 | 7 |
Energy consumption (kWh/year) | 10,038 | 9903 | 9947 |
HVAC capacity (kW) | 11.9 | 11.5 | 12.4 |
Energy savings vs. baseline (%) | 4.3% | 5.6% | 5.1% |
Overall LCC at design (AUD) | 98,000 | 93,000 | 94,000 |
Incremental costs—baseline (AUD) | −4281 | −5136 | −7076 |
Performance Indicators | Location | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Melbourne | Perth | Brisbane | Darwin | |
List of EEMs | R-2 Walls, R-4.1 Ceiling, Low-E Double Glazing, 10 ACH 50, HPWH, No SWH, Std Eff HP | R-2.5 Walls, R-4.1 Ceiling, Low-E Double Glazing, 10 ACH 50, HPWH, No SWH, Std Eff HP | R-2 Walls, R-4.1 Ceiling, Low-E Double Glazing, 15 ACH 50, HPWH, no SWH, High Eff HP | R-2 Walls, R-5 Ceiling, Low-E Double Glazing, 15 ACH 50, HPWH, no SWH, Prem Eff HP |
PV size for NZE design (kW) | 10 | 7 | 7 | 10 |
Energy consumption (kWh/year) | 11,254 | 9903 | 9569 | 14,279 |
HVAC capacity (kW) | 10.3 | 11.5 | 11.5 | 15.4 |
Energy savings vs. baseline (%) | 8.4% | 5.6% | 14.4% | 25.0% |
Overall LCC at design (AUD) | 102,000 | 93,000 | 96,000 | 105,000 |
Incremental costs—baseline (AUD) | −3236 | −5136 | −5437 | 4878 |
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Krarti, M.; Karrech, A. Cost Benefits of Net Zero Energy Homes in Australia. Buildings 2024, 14, 1107. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14041107
Krarti M, Karrech A. Cost Benefits of Net Zero Energy Homes in Australia. Buildings. 2024; 14(4):1107. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14041107
Chicago/Turabian StyleKrarti, Moncef, and Ali Karrech. 2024. "Cost Benefits of Net Zero Energy Homes in Australia" Buildings 14, no. 4: 1107. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14041107
APA StyleKrarti, M., & Karrech, A. (2024). Cost Benefits of Net Zero Energy Homes in Australia. Buildings, 14(4), 1107. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14041107