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New Energy Code components effective January
1, 2004
Highlights
Several changes have occurred
in the latest version of the Georgia Energy Code (GEC).
With the new commercial code, contractors have several
options to show compliance. The simplest method utilizes
a single- step compliance procedure for simple commercial
buildings of two stories or less with less than 25,000
square feet of floor area. This method incorporates three
different one-page forms the builder can use to show compliance
in the lighting, mechanical, and envelope and insulation
systems. The residential code offers numerous prescriptive
and trade-off options to show compliance. In the past, the
Department of Energy offered a software program called MECcheck
to calculate these trade-offs for the building components.
Since the Model Energy Code (MEC) has been replaced by the
International Energy Conservation Code (IECC), MECcheck has
been updated into REScheck (for residential compliance); a
companion program for commercial compliance, COMcheck is also
available. Both of these programs may be obtained for free
from www.energycodes.org. The GEC now requires all residential windows
to display U-factor and Solar Heat Gain Coefficient (SHGC)
information. All windows must have a U-factor of 0.65 or less
and all glazing must have an average SHGC not exceeding 0.40.
The U-Factor refers to the rate of heat loss occurring through
the glass. The lower the U-factor, the greater the window’s
resistance to heat flow and the better the insulating value.
The SHGC refers to the amount of solar heat a window transmits.
The rating range for SHGC is between 0 and 1 with the lower
the number reflecting less heat gain. Double-pane, low-emissivity
(low-e) windows easily meet these specifications. For this
reason, the Georgia construction market should begin to shift
to low-e in early 2004. Benefits Both the 2000 IECC and the Georgia
Energy Code create opportunities for many benefits, the most
obvious being the conservation of our natural resources and
reduction of carbon emissions. Homeowners and businesses
will benefit directly by saving money on energy costs due
to the higher efficiencies of their buildings and properly
sized HVAC systems. Builders and occupants of buildings can
benefit by the new energy code’s air sealing measures that
minimize moisture and comfort problems, thereby reducing
complaints and contractor call-backs. The new energy code has also promoted
the development of new energy efficient products. These products
can improve the energy efficiency and performance of buildings
and spur the local economy. Local businesses in Georgia have
offered new products to the market and created new jobs in
the process. Perform Guard is a borate-treated, environmentally
friendly, rigid foam insulation that deters termites and is
being manufactured by Allied Foam Products in Gainesville,
Georgia. Cardinal Glass in Buford, Georgia manufactures
the efficient, low-e glass required by the code in 2004. They
repurchase and recycle their glass to manufacture new glass,
diverting more than 150 million pounds of waste each year from
landfills. Babb International in Adel, Georgia, is producing
Autoclaved Aerated Concrete (AAC) Hebel block using a process
that originated in Germany. AAC offers an energy-efficient,
lightweight, affordable building material that is fully recyclable.
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