The Project
Funded by the EU’s Horizon 2020 programme, the QualitEE project aims to increase investment in energy efficiency services in the building sector within the EU and improve trust in service providers. To achieve these aims, quality assessment criteria and business cases for quality assurance schemes have been developed.
The QualitEE consortium comprises 12 partner organisations covering 18 European countries, an expert advisory board including the European standards body CEN/CENELEC, and 59 supporters from major financial institutions, government bodies, trade associations and certification bodies.
The Challenge
The European Union has set a binding energy efficiency target of 32,5% by 2030, yet it has identified that there is currently insufficient investment in energy efficiency from energy users and financial institutions to achieve this target.
Energy efficiency services are expected to make a key contribution to the achievement of targets in public, commercial and large residential buildings.
The specific challenges for energy efficiency services have been identified by European Union backed initiatives – including the Energy Efficiency Financial Institutions Group and the Transparense project – to be:
- Lack of trust from clients and financial institutions in energy efficiency services and providers
- Lack of skills and assessment tools to identify whether energy efficiency services are ‘good’ or ‘bad’ quality
- Individual energy efficiency services are too small to access cost effective finance
- Heterogeneity / lack of standardisation of energy efficiency services makes them…
- Difficult for investors to compare and assess quality
- Difficult for financial institutions to aggregate into large funds to access cost effective finance
- Energy efficiency services are complex causing…
- Difficulty in assessing technical risk, leading to hesitation in investment decisions
- High due diligence costs that harm the investment case
- Financial institutions receive too much irrelevant information
The Solution
QualitEE builds upon the Transparense project, which established the European Code of Conduct for Energy Performance Contracting in 2014. Signed by over 200 EPC providers and facilitators, the code defines the basic values and principles that are considered fundamental for EPC projects and represents an important first step to increasing transparency and trust for these services.
However, the code does not provide the assessment criteria or verification procedures that are required to enforce the quality of EPC. The QualitEE project looks to address this, whilst broadening the scope to include a wider range of energy efficiency services.
Main objectives:
- Publish technical quality assessment criteria and assessment processes – core criteria harmonised across Europe with National adaptations. View Belgium’s criteria here.
- Research and develop business cases for national quality assurance schemes to operationalise the application of quality assessment criteria. View Belgium’s business case here.
In order to achieve these objectives the project has:
- Engaged key stakeholders via national discussion platforms, training seminars and extensive market research surveys
- Tested quality criteria and assessment processes in pilot projects
- Delivered focussed training seminars to increase knowledge and skills
- Published guidelines on minimum financial information, in order to expedite investment decisions
- Published a procurement handbook to ensure uptake of quality criteria in projects from the outset
Find out more about the QualitEE project outcomes