Landlord–Tenant Dilemma: How Does the Conflict Affect the Design of Building Energy Systems?

Author:

Kühn Larissa1ORCID,Fuchs Nico1ORCID,Braun Lars1,Maier Laura1ORCID,Müller Dirk1

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Energy Efficient Buildings and Indoor Climate, E.ON Energy Research Center, RWTH Aachen University, 52074 Aachen, Germany

Abstract

To achieve climate goals, the European Union needs to increase building renovation rates. In owner-occupied buildings, energy cost savings provide financial incentives for renovation. However, 30% of all Europeans live in rented property, where conflicting stakeholder interests arise. Landlords are responsible for renovation decisions (building envelope and energy system) and the corresponding investments. Tenants face rising rents and only slightly benefit from falling energy costs. The literature calls this conflict the landlord–tenant dilemma. However, publications lack a quantification, leaving gaps in understanding its impact on technology choices and the heat transition. To address this, we incorporate the perspectives of landlords and tenants in a model-based approach for optimized technology choice (mixed-integer linear program). We compare optimal individual technology choices with the total cost optimum (including costs for landlords and tenants) for renovation decisions. Additionally, we examine how changes in the regulatory framework affect the economically driven landlord’s technology choice. Our study reveals that total costs and emissions are up to 60% and 283% higher for landlords deciding for rented houses compared to owner-occupied properties. Current approaches to solve the dilemma partly favor the development of climate-friendly energy systems. However, the renovation of the building envelope and operation costs are mostly disregarded in the decisions of landlords.

Funder

German Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Climate Action

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Energy (miscellaneous),Energy Engineering and Power Technology,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment,Electrical and Electronic Engineering,Control and Optimization,Engineering (miscellaneous),Building and Construction

Reference48 articles.

1. European Commission (2020). In Focus: Energy Efficiency in Buildings, European Commission.

2. European Commission (2020). A Renovation Wave for Europe—Greening Our Buildings, Creating Jobs, Improving Lives, European Commission.

3. Buildings Performance Institute Europe (2020). On the Way to a Climate-Neutral Europe—Contributions from the Building Sector to a Strengthened 2030 Climate Target, Buildings Performance Institute Europe (BPIE).

4. (2024, January 22). Eurostat. Available online: https://data.europa.eu/data/datasets/fatiyjckzlxuhnx3wzuw?locale=en.

5. Henger, R., and Krotova, A. (2024, January 22). Auflösung des Klimaschutz-Wohnkosten-Dilemmas? Förderung Energetischer Modernisierungen mit dem Energie- und Klimafonds [Solving the Climate Protection-Housing Cost Dilemma? Funding for Energy Modernization with the Energy and Climate Fund]. Available online: https://www.iwkoeln.de/fileadmin/user_upload/Studien/Gutachten/PDF/2020/IW_Gutachten_2020_EKF-FÃűrderung_final.pdf.

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