Terms and Definitions
Certain terms are consistently used in the fields of building energy efficiency
and financial and economic analysis. Energy Raters must be familiar with
the terminology of both fields to properly discharge their function as energy
auditors and to understand the financial implications of the recommendations
they make to their clients. For ease of reference the two fields have been
segregated, then alphabetized below. In a few instances a term has been included
in both sections.
Energy-Efficiency, Energy Code and Rating System Terminology
The following terms form the basis of the nomenclature that is used
in the field of building energy efficiency. Without full comprehension
of this terminology, Raters will
not be able to converse intelligently with their clients, program administrators
or technical assistance personnel.
- Accreditation:
The process of certifying a Home Energy Rating System (HERS)
as being compliant with the national industry standard operating
procedures for Home Energy Rating System.(1)
- AFUE (Annual Fuel Utilization
Efficiency): A measurement of the seasonal energy efficiency
of gas heating equipment. It is the annual output energy of the
equipment divided by its annual input energy, expressed in consistent
units (i.e. Btu-out
per Btu-in). Thus, the resultant value of AFUE is unit less. AFUE
includes any input energy required by the pilot light but does
not include any electrical energy for fans or pumps.
- BESTEST (Building Energy
Simulation Test): A standardized procedure developed by
the National Renewable Energy Laboratory and used to test the energy
load prediction capabilities and accuracy of software designed
for use in Home Energy Rating Systems.(2) Florida's ENERGYGAUGE
software has been subjected to the BESTEST procedure with excellent
results.(3)
- Btu (British Thermal Unit):
One of the two (watt-hours is
the other) standard units of measure (IP System) for the amount of
energy consumed by a process, the amount of energy transferred from
one location to another, or the amount of embodied energy (such as
the heat content of fuels). Specifically, it is the amount of energy
required to raise the temperature of one pound of water by one degree
Fahrenheit. The term 'kBtu' stands for "kiloBtu" or 1,000
Btu. The term of 'MBtu' stands for "MegaBtu" or 1,000,000
Btu. One Btu is equal to 0.293 watt-hours (Wh).
- Btu/h (British Thermal
Units per Hour): One of the two (watts is
the other) standard units of measure (IP System) for the rate at
which energy is used by equipment or the rate at which energy moves
from one location to another. One Btu/h is equal to 0.293 watts
(W).
- CABO (Council of American
Building Officials): A national organization of building
code officials and interested parties which, through a national
consensus process, developed, adopted and promulgated the national
Model Energy Code (MEC).
CABO has recently become CABO International and has taken on the
administrative responsibility for the development of a uniform
international building code through an International Code Council
(ICC).
- Capacity:
The rate at which the heating or cooling load can be satisfied by
a given equipment system designed to heat or cool and dehumidify
a conditioned space or heat service hot water. Heating and cooling
capacity is normally given on equipment nameplates in units of Btu/h.
The air conditioning industry often uses units of "tons" to
refer to equipment capacity. One ton of capacity equals 12,000 Btu/h.
- Confirmed Rating:
A Class
2 or Class
1 Rating performed on a completed construction project that confirms
the energy-efficient features of a new building or the improvements
made to an existing building.
- Construction
Documents: The set contractual documents by and between
the owner and builder of a new building for construction, consisting
of all drawings (the plans) and written specifications that are
intended to govern the construction of the building.
- COP (Coefficient of Performance):
A measurement of the instantaneous efficiency of heating or cooling
equipment. It represents the steady-state rate of energy output of
the equipment divided by the steady-state rate of energy input to
the equipment, expressed in consistent units (i.e. watts-out
per watts-in or Btu/h-out
per Btu/h-in). Thus, the resultant value of COP is unit less. Most
vapor-compression heating and cooling equipment has COPs greater
than unity. That means it delivers more heat energy than it consumes.
- EEM (Energy Efficient Mortgage):
Specifically, a home mortgage for which the borrower's qualifying debt-to-income and housing
expense-to-income ratios have been increased ("stretched")
by 2% because the home meets or exceeds the minimum standards of
the Council of American Building Officials (CABO)
1992 version of the Model Energy Code (MEC).
This so-called "stretch" mortgage results
from provisions of the Cranston-Gonzalez National Affordable Housing
Act, and is refined by the U.S. Energy Policy Act of 1992 (EPAct).
The EEM is nationally underwritten by Fannie
Mae, Freddie
Mac and the Federal Housing Administration (FHA). NOTE:
This term is often used generically to refer to any home mortgage
for which the underwriting guidelines have been relaxed specifically
for energy efficiency features, or for which any form of financing
incentive is given for energy efficiency.
- EER (Energy Efficiency Ratio):
A measurement of the instantaneous energy efficiency of cooling equipment.
It normally is used only for electric air conditioning equipment.
EER is the steady-state rate of heat energy removal by the equipment
in Btu/h divided
by the steady-state rate of energy input to the equipment in watts.
Thus, the resultant value for EER has units of Btu/Wh.
The EER of a given system is always higher than the COP of that system
by a factor equal to the number of Btu/h in a watt, or 3.413.
- EIM (Energy Improvement Mortgage):
A home improvement mortgage that is given specifically for energy
efficiency improvements to the property.
- EF (Energy Factor):
A standardized measurement of the annual energy efficiency of water
heating systems. It is the annual hot water energy delivered to a
standard hot water load divided by the total annual purchased hot
water energy input in consistent units (Wh-out
per Wh-in or Btu-out
per Btu-in). Thus, the resultant value of EF is unit less. EF is determined
by a standardized US Department of Energy procedure. Florida has
developed EFs for almost all types of water heating systems, including
solar water heating system.
- Energy (use):
The quantity of electricity, gas or other fuel required by the building
equipment to satisfy the building heating, cooling and hot water
loads imposed on that equipment by its thermostats plus the energy
required to satisfy any other energy service requirements (lighting,
refrigeration, cooking, etc.) of the building (see also the definitions
of load and thermostat).
- Energy Audit:
A site inventory and descriptive record of features impacting the
energy use in a building. This includes, but is not limited to: all
building component descriptions (locations, areas, orientations,
construction attributes and energy transfer characteristics); all
energy using equipment and appliance descriptions (use, make, model,
capacity, efficiency and fuel type) and all energy features.
- ENERGYGAUGE:
Florida's computerized tool for energy code compliance and energy
rating computations, including combined energy, economic and financial
analysis. (Click here to go to
a separate web page dedicated to ENERGYGAUGE.)
- ENERGY STAR® Home:
A home, certified by the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA),
that is at least 30% more energy efficient than the minimum national
standard for home energy efficiency as specified by the 1992 CABOMEC.
EPA has a number of partners and allies in its ENERGY STAR homes
program and homes that qualify for ENERGY STAR certification through
EPA are eligible for mortgage financing incentives through EPA's
mortgage banking allies. Qualification for the ENERGY STAR home label
requires a HERS
Index of 70 or lower. In Florida, this means that the home
must receive a confirmed Rating by a certified Class
2 or Class
1 Rater.
ENERGY STAR is a registered trademark of the U.S. EPA.
- EPAct (Energy Policy Act
of 1992): An Act of the 1992 U.S. Congress which, among
other things, requires the Secretary of DOE to issue voluntary
guidelines for residential energy efficiency ratings and requires
the Secretary of HUD to establish an Energy
Efficient Mortgage Pilot Program. The Act also requires state
governments to "certify to the Secretary (of U.S. DOE) that
it has reviewed the provisions of its residential building codes
regarding energy efficiency and made a determination as to whether
it is appropriate for such state to revise such residential building
code provisions to meet or exceed the CABO Model
Energy Code, 1992."
- Existing Residence
(or Home): A Completed residential occupancy building,
including residential occupancy dwellings in mixed occupancy buildings
for which a certificate of occupancy, or equivalent approval for
occupancy, has been issued.
- Fannie Mae (FNMA
- Federal National Mortgage Association): A private, tax-paying
corporation chartered by the U.S. Congress to provide financial
products and services that increase the availability of housing
for low-, moderate-, and middle-income Americans. Fannie Mae is
the nation's largest corporation with $366 billion in assets and
$674 billion in mortgage backed securities as of 1998. It is traded
on the New York Stock Exchange (FNM), has 240,000 shareholders,
and is part of Standard & Poor's 500 index. Fannie Mae constitutes
the largest part of the nation's secondary mortgage market. Fannie
Mae effectively increases the money supply in the primary mortgage
market by purchasing (up to their prescribed limit of $214,600
as of 1/1/97), packaging, guaranteeing and selling conventional
residential mortgages (as well as those insured by FHA or
guaranteed by VA) to investors as Mortgage Backed Securities (MBS).
- FHA (Federal Housing Administration):
A division of the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD).
FHA's main activity is the insurance of residential mortgage loans
made by private lenders. FHA neither buys nor originates mortgages,
however, through its insurance function it sets standards for mortgage
underwriting. FHA insured loans are open to all qualified home purchasers
of moderately priced homes (up to a maximum loan value of $155,250
as of 1/1/96). FHA requires a Mortgage Insurance Premium (MIP)
of up to 2.25 percent of the loan amount (paid at closing) to insure
the loan with FHA. In addition, FHA mortgage insurance requires an
annual insurance fee of up to 0.5 percent of the loan amount, paid
in monthly installments. The lower the down payment, the more years
the mortgage insurance fee must be paid.
- Freddie Mac (FHLMC
- Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation): A stockholder-owned
organization, chartered by the U.S. Congress to increase the supply
of mortgage funds. Freddie Mac purchases conventional mortgages
from insured depository institutions and HUD-approved mortgage
bankers. It does not originate loans but it provides a secondary
market for the mortgage industry by purchasing their mortgages,
packaging them into securities that are guaranteed by Freddie Mac,
and selling them to investors.
- HERS (Home Energy Rating
System): A standardized system for rating the energy-efficiency
of residential buildings. Home Energy Rating Systems are currently
governed by three national industry standards: 1) the NASEO Technical
Guidelines (4),
which prescribe the accepted methods and procedures for rating
a home; 2) the Mortgage Industry HERS Accreditation Procedures (1),
which prescribe the methods and procedures for the certification
of Home Energy Rating System by individual state governments and
the national home mortgage industry: and the RESNET Training
and Certifying Standards (8),
which prescribe minimum competencies for Trainers and certified
Raters. In Florida, HERS are additionally governed by an Act of
the State Legislature(5) that
requires the Florida Department of Community Affairs (DCA) "to
adopt, update and maintain a statewide uniform building energy-efficiency
rating system" through rulemaking.(6)
- HERS Energy-Efficient Reference
Home (EERH): The EERH is a geometric "twin" to
the home being evaluated (Rated
Home) and is configured to be minimally compliant with the
National Council of American Building Officials (CABO)
Model Energy Code (MEC)
of 1992.
- HERS Provider:
An individual or organization responsible for the operation and management
of a Home Energy Rating System. By Florida Statute, the sole HERS
provider authorized to perform this function in the State is the
Florida Department of Community Affairs.
- HERS Rater:
An individual, certified by the State of Florida, to perform residential
Building Energy Efficiency Ratings in the Class for which the Rater
is certified. There are three classes of residential Rater certification:
Class 3 - requiring the certified capability to complete Ratings
based on construction documents; Class
2 - requiring the certified capability to complete Ratings based
on site energy audits; and Class
1 - requiring the certified capability to complete Ratings based
on site energy audits and performance tests.
- HERS Index :
A scoring system established by the Residential Energy Services Network (RESNET) in which a home built to the specifications of the HERS Reference Home (based on the 2006 International Energy Conservation Code) scores a HERS Index of 100, while a net zero energy home scores a HERS Index of 0. The lower a home’s HERS Index, the more energy efficient it is in comparison to the HERS Reference Home. Each 1-point decrease in the HERS Index corresponds to a 1% reduction in energy consumption compared to the HERS Reference Home. Thus a home with a HERS Index of 85 is 15% more energy efficient than the HERS Reference Home and a home with a HERS Index of 80 is 20% more energy efficient.
- HSPF (Heating Season Performance
Factor): A measurement of the seasonal efficiency of an
electric heat pump using a standard heating load and outdoor climate
profile over a standard heating season. It represents the total
seasonal heating output in Btu divided
by the total seasonal electric power input in watt-hours (Wh).
Thus, the resultant value for HSPF has units of Btu/Wh.
- Improvement
Analysis: A written calculation of the cost-effectiveness
of various options to improve the energy efficiency of a building,
including an explicit report on the assumed financing rate and
lives of the measures used in the calculation and consideration
of interactions between energy-saving measures.
- Load: The quantity
of heat that must be added to or removed from the building (or the
hot water tank) to satisfy specific levels of service - in other
words, to keep the space temperature or hot water temperature at
a specified thermostat setting (see also the definitions of energy
and thermostat).
- MEC (Model Energy Code):
A "model" national standard for residential energy efficiency.
The MEC was developed through a national consensus process by the
Council of American Building Officials (CABO)
and is the accepted national minimum efficiency standard for residential
construction. Since MEC is a model code, it does not have the "force
of law" unless and until it is adopted by the local code authority.
Nonetheless, MEC is used as the basis for many, if not most, of the
energy efficiency criteria employed in the U.S. marketplace. By virtue
of its reference in the 1992 U.S. Energy Policy Act (EPAct),
the MEC is used as the national standard for determining Energy Efficient
Mortgage (EEM)
qualification, and it serves as the national "reference point" used
by Home Energy Rating Systems (HERS)
in the determination of energy ratings for homes.
- NAECA (National Appliance
Energy Conservation Act): An act of the 1987 U.S. Congress
requiring the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) to establish minimum
performance efficiency standards for residential equipment and
appliances sold within the United States.
- NASEO (National Association
of State Energy Officials): The national association of
state energy officials.
- New Residence
(or Home): A residential occupancy buildings, including
new residential occupancy dwellings in mixed occupancy buildings,
that is permitted for construction after July 1, 1994, but has
not yet been issued a certificate of occupancy.
- Performance
Test: An on-site measurement of the energy performance
of a building energy feature or an energy using device conducted
in accordance with pre-defined testing and measurement protocols
and analysis and computation methods. Such protocols and methods
may be defined by national consensus standards like those of the
American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air Conditioning
Engineers (ASHRAE) and the American Society for Test and Measurement
(ASTM), or as modified or defined and adopted by the Department
of Community Affairs, Office of Codes and Standards.
- Point
Multiplier: A colloquial term for load correlation coefficient.
A numeric value that when multiplied by the number of units of
a given building component will yield the overall contribution
of that component to the annual heating, cooling or hot water load
for the building. Florida's energy code for residential buildings
uses summer point multipliers (SPM), winter point multipliers (WPM)
and hot water point multipliers (HWPM) to compute the various annual
loads for the residence.
- Projected
Rating: A rating of
any Class performed prior to the construction of a new building
or prior to implementation of energy-efficiency improvements to
an existing building.
- RESNET (Residential Energy
Services Network): The national association of energy
rating providers.
- Rated Home:
The specific residence that is evaluated by an energy rating.
- Rater: An individual,
certified by the State of Florida, to perform Building Energy Efficiency Ratings for
the building type and in the rating Class for
which the Rater is
certified. There are three classes of residential Rater certification: Class
3 - requiring the certified capability to complete Ratings based
on construction documents; Class
2 - requiring the certified capability to complete Ratings based
on site energy audits; and Class
1 - requiring the certified capability to complete Ratings based
on site energy audits and performance tests. (See also HERS
Rater.)
- Rating (Building Energy-Efficiency
Rating): A set of documents comprising a registered Rating
Guide (DCA Form 11) plus any appropriate improvement recommendations,
economic analysis, and financial forms that are required to complete
an energy efficient mortgage application for the rated building.
There are two types of Rating: Projected
Ratings and Confirmed
Ratings. Projected ratings are reserved for Ratings Based on
Plans (new
buildings) and Ratings for Improvement (existing or
new buildings). Confirmed Ratings are reserved for final documentation
of completed new buildings or for documentation of improvements
to existing buildings.
- Rating Class:
The category of a Rating,
based on the source of the input data which are used to compute the
energy and cost estimates of the Rating, and consisting of the following
three categories:
- Class 1 Rating -
An energy rating,
conducted using site energy audit and performance test data as
the sources for the input data on which the rating is based.
- Class 2 Rating -
An energy rating conducted
using site energy audit data as the source for the input data on
which the rating is based.
- Class 3 Rating -
A projected energy rating reserved
for new buildings and clearly labeled as a "projected rating
based on plans" that is conducted using
construction documents as the sources for the input data on which
the rating is based.
- Rating Guide:
A completed and signed DCA Form 11 providing the following information:
the type of rating (projected or confirmed);
the registration number for the Rating; the estimated energy use
and energy cost for the building and its associated energy end-uses;
the name, signature and certification number of the Rater;
a comparative analysis of the building's energy-efficiency relative
to other, similar buildings of the same type, located in the same
climate; the national HERS
Index for the building; and information on how the Rating should
be interpreted.
- R-value: A
numeric value defining the resistance to heat transfer of the full
thickness of a material or composite of materials. R-value is the
reciprocal of conductance (C) and has units of hr/Btu-ft2-oF. Important
Note on R-values: The input values required by Florida's code and
rating system calculation procedures are for the R-value of the designated
insulation product only - not the R-value of the entire building
component assembly.
- SEER (Seasonal Energy Efficiency
Ratio): A measurement similar to HSPF except
that it measures the seasonal cooling efficiency of an electric
air conditioner or heat pump using a standard cooling load and
outdoor climate profile over a standard cooling season. It represents
the total seasonal cooling output in Btu divided
by the total seasonal electric input in watt-hours (Wh).
Thus, the resultant value for SEER has units of Btu/Wh.
- Shading Coefficient (SC):
The ratio of the total solar heat admittance of a given glazing product
relative to the solar heat admittance of " double-strength,
clear glass at normal solar incidence (i.e. perpendicular to the
glazing surface).
- Solar Heat Gain Coefficient
(SHGC): The ratio of the total solar heat admittance of
a given window product relative to the solar heat incident on the
projected window surface at normal solar incidence (i.e. perpendicular
to the glazing surface).
- Thermostat:
A control device that measures the temperature of the air in a home
or the water in a hot water tank and activates the heating or cooling
equipment to cause the air or water temperature to remain at a pre-specified
value, normally called the set point temperature (see also the definitions
of load and energy).
- Ton(s): A term used
primarily by the air conditioning industry to characterize the cooling capacity of
air conditioning equipment. One ton equals 12,000 Btu/h.
- U-value: The
total thermal conductance of a building assembly (wall, floor, ceiling,
etc.), including the indoor and outdoor air-film resistance of the
assembly. The U-value when multiplied by the effective temperature
difference between the indoors and outdoors, including the effects
of solar and sky radiation (the "sol-air" temperature)
where appropriate, will yield the normalized (per unit area) heat
flow across that building composite. The units of U-value are Btu/hr-ft2-oF.
- W (watt): One of
two (Btu/h is
the other) standard units of measure (SI System) for the rate at
which energy is consumed by equipment or the rate at which energy
moves from one location to another. It is also the standard unit
of measure for electrical power. The term 'kW' stands for "kilowatt" or
1,000 watts. The term 'MW' stands for "Megawatt" or 1,000,000
watts. One watt is equal to 3.413 Btu/h.
- Wh (watt-hour): One
of two (Btu is
the other) standard units of measure (SI system) for the amount of
energy that is consumed by equipment, the amount of embodied energy,
or the amount of energy moved from one location to another. It is
also the standard unit of measure for electrical use. The term 'kWh'
stands for "kilowatt-hour" or 1,000 watt-hours. The term
'MWh' stands for "Megawatt-hours" or 1,000,000 watt-hours.
One watt-hour is equal to 3.413 Btu.
Additional energy and energy code terminology of interest is defined
in Chapter 2 of the Florida Energy Code.
(7)
Economic, Financial and Real
Estate Terminology
The following terms are basic to understanding and using energy ratings in
the financial marketplace. The enhanced version of ENERGYGAUGE is
designed to perform analysis and produce results and reports that are useful
in obtaining home mortgages. Without a full understanding of the terms contained
in this section, Raters will not be able to take advantage of these powerful
marketplace capabilities or provide these important services to their clients.
- Adjustable Rate Mortgage:
A secured loan in which the interest rate is adjusted periodically based
on a preselected index. Also sometimes known as the renegotiable rate mortgage,
the variable rate mortgage or the Canadian rollover mortgage.
- Analysis with Replacement:
An Improvement
Analysis that includes the replacement cost of energy-efficient equipment
whose useful life is exceeded during the analysis period. The cost of replacing
the energy-efficient equipment, escalated at the general
inflation rate, is added to the periodic cash
flow stream the period following the end of its useful life.
- Appraisal or Appraised
Value: An estimate of the value of property, made by a qualified
professional called an "appraiser."
- Assessment or Assessed
Value: The value placed on real property (a building and its grounds)
by the local property tax authority.
- Cost/Assessment:
The ratio of the cost (or appraised value) of a building with respect to
its assessed value. The cost to assessment ratio is normally less than 1.0
and is defaulted to 0.80 in the financial section of ENERGYGAUGE.
This value is used to determine the basis for ad valorem (property) taxes
on the property for ENERGYGAUGE financial analysis.
- Cash Flow: Periodic
money stream(s) resulting from an economic decision that are expected to
continue into the future. For example, rent payments, mortgage payments,
taxes, etc. By convention, incoming cash flows (revenues) are positive and
outgoing cash flows (payments) are negative. ENERGYGAUGE calculates
the cash flow for each individual economic component of the analysis, for
each year of the analysis period.
- Cash Flow
Schedule: A table of cash flows that includes each of the periodic
money streams associated with an economic decision.
- Current Salvage:
The salvage value of an existing home measure that will be replaced with
a more efficient measure. Typically this value will be zero. However, for
example, if an air conditioner is replaced with a more efficient one and
the original unit has a useful life and can be sold for $300, then $300 is
the Current Salvage value.
- Debt-to-Income Ratio:
The ratio, expressed as a percentage, which results when a borrower's total
monthly payment obligations on long-term debt are divided by their gross
monthly income. This is one of two ratios (housing
expense-to-income ratio being the other) used by the mortgage industry
to determine if a prospective borrower qualifies (meets the underwriting
guidelines) for a specific home mortgage. Fannie
Mae, Freddie
Mac and FHA underwriting
guidelines set an upper limit of 36% on this value for conventional loans
but increase ("stretch") the ratio by 2% for qualifying Energy
Efficient Mortgages.
- Discount Rate:
The interest rate reflecting the time value of money that is used to convert cash
flows occurring at different times to a common time (e.g. to convert future
values to present
values and vice versa). The discount rate represents the opportunity
cost of money and is often selected as the after-tax rate of return on an
alternative investment or the cost of borrowing money. ENERGYGAUGE uses
a real discount rate as opposed to a nominal (or market) discount rate. In
general, the nominal discount rate is equivalent to the real discount rate
increased by the personal income tax burden plus the general inflation rate.
The default value used by ENERGYGAUGE for the discount rate is 5%, real.
ENERGYGAUGE uses a default personal income tax rate of 28% and default general
inflation rate of 3%, equating to default market discount rate about 10%,
nominal.
- ECM (Energy Conservation Measure):
An individual building component or product that directly impacts energy
use in a building and has a set of differentiable energy performance factors
that can be arranged into a table or list. For example, wall insulation is
a measure that will impact heat transfer to and from a building, and there
is some list of wall measures that are differentiated by insulation R-value that
define the possible walls that can be incorporated into a building. ENERGYGAUGE uses
ECM tables to define and store the economic data associated with building
energy efficiency alternatives.
- ECM Lifetime:
The useful lifetime of an energy
conservation measure.
- EEM (Energy Efficient Mortgage):
Specifically, a home mortgage for which the borrower's qualifying debt-to-income
and housing expense-to-income ratios have been increased ("stretched")
by 2% because the home meets or exceeds the minimum standards of the Council
of American Building Officials (CABO)
1992 version of the Model Energy Code (MEC).
This so-called "stretch" mortgage results from provisions of the
Cranston-Gonzalez National Affordable Housing Act, and is refined by the
U.S. Energy Policy Act (EPAct)
of 1992. The EEM is nationally underwritten by Fannie
Mae, Freddie
Mac and the Federal Housing Administration (FHA). NOTE:
This term is often used generically to refer to any home mortgage for which
the underwriting guidelines have been relaxed specifically for energy efficiency
features, or for which any form of financing incentive is given for energy
efficiency.
- EIM (Energy Improvement Mortgage):
A home improvement mortgage that is given specifically for energy efficiency
improvements to the property.
- ENERGYGAUGE:
Florida's computerized tool for energy code compliance and energy rating
computations, including combined energy, economic and financial analysis.
(Click here to go to
a separate web page dedicated to ENERGYGAUGE.)
- End of Life Salvage:
The salvage value of a measure at the end of its useful life. Typically,
this value will be $0. For an economic analysis in which the useful life
of a measure is not reached at the end of the analysis period, ENERGYGAUGE will
calculate a salvage value for the remaining life of the measure using straight-line
depreciation. ENERGYGAUGE will include this salvage value in the cash flow
schedule and in the savings to investment ratio and internal rate of return
calculations.
- Energy
Savings Goal: A user-defined level of building energy efficiency
which is used by ENERGYGAUGE's
automatic optimization feature
as the point at which the analysis will cease.
- Fixed Rate
Mortgage: A secured loan in which the interest
rate has the same value for the life of the loan.
- Fuel
Price Inflation Rate: The annual increase in fuel price as a percent
of its present value. ENERGYGAUGE uses
this value to escalate fuel price in its economic and financial analysis
procedures. The ENERGYGAUGE default value is 3%, the same as the default
value for the general inflation rate, making the default increase in fuel
cost relative to other goods and services equal to zero.
- Future Value (FV): Monies accruing
in the future that have not been discounted to account for the fact that
they will be worth less in the future than they are today.
- General
Inflation Rate: The annual increase in the price of goods and
services as a percent of their present price. ENERGYGAUGE uses
this value to escalate the cost of maintenance and
the cost of ECM replacements
in its financial and economic analysis procedures. The ENERGYGAUGE default
value for the general inflation rate is 3%. Increases in fuel prices are
computed separately using the fuel price escalation rate, which is also
defaulted to 3% in ENERGYGAUGE.
- Housing
Expense-to-Income Ratio: The ratio, expressed as a percentage,
which results when a borrower's total monthly housing expenses (P.I.T.I.)
are divided by their gross monthly income. This is one of two ratios (debt-to-income
ratio being the other) used by the mortgage industry to determine if
a prospective borrower qualifies (meets the underwriting guidelines) for
a specific home mortgage. Fannie
Mae, Freddie
Mac and FHA underwriting
guidelines set an upper limit of 28% on this value for conventional
loans but increase ("stretch") the ratio by 2% for qualifying Energy
Efficient Mortgages.
- Improvement
Analysis: A written calculation of the cost-effectiveness of various
options to improve the energy efficiency of a building, including an explicit
report on the assumed financing rate and lives of the measures used in
the calculation and consideration of interactions between energy-saving
measures.
- Income Tax Rate:
The marginal rate at which personal income is taxed by the federal government. ENERGYGAUGE uses
this number to compute income tax impacts associated with mortgage interest
payments.
- Internal Rate of Return (IRR):
The present
value of the net
cash flow stream expressed as an annual percentage growth rate of the
initial investment (i.e. the annual compound interest rate required to produce
the same result as the evaluated investment). ENERGYGAUGE includes
all taxes in its net cash flow stream so the IRR given by ENERGYGAUGE is
an after-tax rate of return.
- Loan-to-value Ratio (LTV): The
total amount of the mortgage loan
divided by the appraised
value of the property that secures the mortgage.
- Maintenance Cost:
The cost of keeping an ECM in
good operating condition. ENERGYGAUGE uses
this cost to determine the differential cost of maintaining one measure over
another. Unless the maintenance cost of one ECM in a list is greater than
the maintenance cost of the others, there is no need to enter maintenance
costs in the ECM list because the incremental cost of selecting one measure
compared to the others will always be $0. In general, there are only a few
measures in an ECM list that have a differentiated maintenance costs. Therefore,
it is simplest to enter only the incremental cost for any measures that have
a differentiated maintenance cost.
- Mortgage Note:
A written agreement to repay a loan. The agreement is secured by a mortgage,
serves as proof of indebtedness, and states the manner in which the debt
shall be paid. The note states the actual amount of the debt that the mortgage
secures and renders the mortgagor personally responsible for repayment.
- Mortgage
Down Payment: Money paid by the borrower to make up the difference
between the purchase price and the loan amount.
- Mortgage
Interest Rate: The price charged for borrowing money expressed
as a percentage of the unpaid loan balance.
- Mortgage Insurance Premium (MIP):
The payment made by a borrower to the lender for transmittal to HUD to help
defray the cost of the FHA mortgage
insurance program and to provide a reserve fund to protect lenders against
loss in insured mortgage transactions. In FHA insured mortgages this represents
a payment of 2.25% of the loan principle at closing plus an annual rate of
one-half of one percent paid by the mortgagor on a monthly basis.
- Mortgage Points:
A point is equal to one percent of the principal amount of the mortgage.
Lenders frequently charge points for both fixed-rate and adjustable-rate
mortgages to cover loan origination costs and to increase the yield on the
mortgage. These points normally are collected at closing and may be paid
by the buyer (borrower) or the seller, or may be split between them.
- Mortgage
Principal: The amount of money owed by the borrower to the lender,
and the amount used to compute the periodic interest payments on simple
interest loans. The principal normally decreases during the life of a simple
interest mortgage. However, for negative amortization mortgages it will
increase over time and for interest only loans it does not change.
- Net Cash Flow:
The sum of the positive (revenues) and negative (expenditures) monies accruing
during each period of an economic analysis (i.e. the total revenues minus
the total expenditures for each period of the economic analysis, normally
expressed in future
value dollars).
- Net Present Value (NPV): The present
value of all saving (revenue) streams less the present value of all
cost (investment) streams.
- Optimization:
A energy analysis and economic evaluation process that seeks to determine
the most cost-effective means of achieving a stated energy-efficiency or
energy use goal.
- P.I.T.I.: An
abbreviation which stands for principal, interest, taxes, and insurance.
These generally represent a borrower's total monthly payment obligations
on a home loan. The taxes and insurance portion are paid monthly to an impound
or escrow account and may be adjusted annually to reflect changes in the
cost of each.
- Present Value (PV): Monies accruing
in the future that have been discounted to account for the fact that those
monies will be worth less in the future than they are today.
- Present Worth (PW): The same
as Net Present Value (NPV).
The present value of all saving (revenue) streams less the present value
of all cost (investment) streams.
- Private Mortgage Insurance (PMI): Insurance
that protects a lender from loan losses in the event of default. In most
cases, PMI is used to insure the amount of a loan in excess of an 80 percent
loan-to-value ratio (LTV).
- Property Tax
Rate: The rate at which real property ownership is taxed by the
local ad valorem taxing authority.
- Ranking Method:
The economic criteria by which energy conservation measures are ordered in
an ENERGYGAUGE optimization analysis.
The user-selectable ranking methods available in ENERGYGAUGE are as follows:
- Simple
Payback -- will minimize the added first costs for
the improvements with respect to the achieved energy savings.
- Net Present Value of Savings -- will maximize the net
present value (present worth) of the energy savings over
the life of the mortgage or other specified period.
- Savings to Investment Ratio (SIR) --
will maximize the net present value of energy savings with
respect to the net present value of the added first costs (investment)
over the life of the mortgage or other specified period.
- Internal Rate of Return on Investment (IRR) --
will maximize the rate at which the added first costs (investment)
for the energy-efficiency improvements return savings over
the life of the mortgage or other specified period.
- 1st Year Cash Flow based on Mortgage -- will maximize
the net first year cash
flow to the home owner as a function of the mortgage term and interest
rate.
- Savings: The reduction
in operating (energy) cost that results from an improvement in building energy
efficiency.
- Saving to Investment Ratio (SIR):
The ratio of the present
value of an energy saving stream
with respect to the present value of the cost of
making the energy efficiency improvements.
- Simple payback:
The number of years needed to pay for energy efficiency improvements using
the energy cost savings that
accrue annually from those improvements. The initial cost of
the improvements divided by the annual energy cost savings from those improvements.
- Upgrade Cost:
The price that must be paid to install an energy conservation measure into
a building. If the building is "new" (i.e.
has not yet been constructed), then the cost is equal to the cost of the
improved measure minus the cost of the minimum standard measure. If the building
already exists, then the cost is equal to the cost of the measure minus the
current salvage value for the existing measure.
- Underwriting
Guidelines: The set of procedures and criteria used by lending
institutions to determine if it is in their best interest to originate
(primary lenders) or purchase (secondary lenders) a specific mortgage.
- Mortgage
Industry National Accreditation Procedures for Home Energy Rating Systems,
June 1998. Residential Energy Services Network (RESNET),
Oceanside, CA; and National Association of State Energy Officials (NASEO),
Washington DC.
- Judkoff, R. and J. Neymark, August 1997. "Home
Energy Rating System Building Energy Simulation Test for Florida (Florida
- HERS BESTEST)," Vol. 1 & 2, NREL/TP-550-23124, National Renewable
Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO.
- Fairey, P. et.al., January 1998. "Comparison
of EnGauge 2.0 Heating and Cooling Load Predictions with the HERS BESTEST
Criteria," FSEC-CR-893-98, Florida Solar Energy Center, Cocoa, FL.
- NASEO
Home Energy Rating Technical Guidelines, September1999. National
Association of State Energy Officials, Washington, DC.
- Florida
Building Energy Efficiency Ratings Act. §553.990, Florida
Statutes, 1993 et. seq.
- Florida Building Energy Rating System. Rule
9-B-60, Florida Administrative Code, Department of Community Affairs, Office
of Codes and Standards, Tallahassee, FL.
- Energy Efficiency Code for Building Construction,
1997 Edition. Florida Department of Community Affairs, Codes and Standards
Office, Tallahassee, Florida.
- RESNET
National Training and Certifying Standards, Residential Energy
Services Network, P.O. Box 4561, Oceanside, CA.