
SAP is the Government's Standard Assessment Procedure for Energy Rating
of Dwellings. Based on the Building Research Establishments BREDEM
model, SAP
2005 is adopted by government as part of the UK national methodology
for calculation of the energy performance of buildings.
It is used to demonstrate compliance for dwellings with Part L of the
Building Regulations (England and Wales) – i.e. provide DER and TER
calculations – and to provide energy ratings for dwellings.
The SAP calculation takes into account a range of factors that
contribute to energy efficiency, such as:
-
materials used for construction of the dwelling
-
thermal insulation of the building fabric
-
ventilation characteristics of the dwelling and ventilation equipment
-
efficiency and control of the heating system(s)
-
solar gains through openings of the dwelling
-
the fuel used to provide space and water heating, ventilation and
lighting, and
-
renewable energy technologies.
As part of the Building Regulations Part L update, SAP has also been
modified. Changes to the 2005 version include:
-
the SAP scale has been revised to 1 to 100, where 100 now represents
zero energy cost. It can be above 100 for dwellings that are net
exporters
-
the dwelling CO2 Emission Rate (DER) together
with an Environmental Impact rating replace the Carbon Index
-
energy for lighting is included
-
solar water heating has been revised
-
cylinder loss has been revised; manufacturer’s data for heat loss
becomes the preferred source of cylinder loss
-
the effect of thermal bridging is taken into the account
-
it incorporates additional renewable and energy saving technologies
-
it provides a method for estimating a tendency to high internal
temperature in summer
-
data tables have been updated (e.g. fuel costs, CO2
emissions, boiler efficiency and heating controls, etc.), and
-
the measure of energy is now kWh rather than GJ.
SAP
and Part L Compliance