Building energy epidemiology is the study of energy demands to improve our understanding of variations in the energy-consuming population, and their causes. It considers the complex interactions between physical and engineered systems, socio-economic and environmental conditions, and the individual practices of occupants. Energy epidemiology provides an over-arching approach, where findings from large-scale studies inform energy policy, and provide the context for conventional smallscale studies and information for predictive models. - Dr Ian Hamilton

In the UK, the practice of using of large, federated databases, such as the National Energy Efficiency Data-Framework, has improved the understanding of the real-world (i.e. empirically measured) impacts of large-scale retrofit programmes. Analysis of energy supplier obligations found that some retrofits were not achieving what the models had estimated (Hamilton et al, 2013; Hamilton et al 2017). The use of NEED has yielded considerable benefit for policymakers in evaluating the impact of retrofit programmes on energy use, helping to target energy poverty programmes such as the Energy Company Obligation and the Warm Homes Discount.

PhD studentship opportunity: Calculation of the Monetary ESGAP (M-ESGAP) indicator
PhD studentship opportunity: Calculation of the Monetary ESGAP (M-ESGAP) indicator

PhD studentship opportunity: Calculation of the Monetary ESGAP (M-ESGAP) indicator

PhD studentship opportunity available at the UCL Institute for Sustainable Resources, exploring the ‘Calculation of the Monetary ESGAP (M-ESGAP) Indicator’.

15 Apr 2025

New Research Finds ‘Substantial’ Global Disparities in Covid-19 Vaccine Accessibility
New Research Finds ‘Substantial’ Global Disparities in Covid-19 Vaccine Accessibility

New Research Finds ‘Substantial’ Global Disparities in Covid-19 Vaccine Accessibility

The research, published in the British Medical Journal, showed major disparities between access to vaccines across 54 surveyed countries, with vaccine deserts in both high- and low-income regions.

15 Apr 2025

TERRITORIES OF CO-COGNITION Symposium
TERRITORIES OF CO-COGNITION Symposium

TERRITORIES OF CO-COGNITION Symposium

TERRITORIES OF CO-COGNITION is a half-day symposium curated by Bartlett academics, critically examining the intersections of artificial intelligence, ethics and the built environment.

14 Apr 2025