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Digital energy visualizations in the workplace: the e-Genie tool

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journal contribution
posted on 2017-12-14, 17:17 authored by Alexa Spence, Murray Goulden, Caroline Leygue, Nick Banks, Ben Bedwell, Mike Jewell, Rayoung Yang, Eamonn Ferguson

Building management systems are designed for energy managers; there are few energy-feedback systems designed to engage staff. A tool, known as e-Genie, was created with the purpose of engaging workplace occupants with energy data and supporting them to take action to reduce energy use. Building on research insights within the field, e-Genie’s novel approach encourages users to make plans to meet energy-saving goals, supports discussion and considers social energy behaviours (e.g. discussing energy issues, taking part in campaigns) as well as individual actions. A field-based study of e-Genie indicated that visualizations of energy data were engaging and that the discussion ‘Pinboard’ was particularly popular. Pre- and post-survey (N = 77) evaluation of users indicated that people were significantly more concerned about energy issues and reported engaging more in social energy behaviour after about two weeks of e-Genie being installed. Concurrently, objective measures of electricity use decreased over the same period, and continued decreasing over subsequent weeks. Indications are that occupant-facing energy-feedback visualizations can be successful in reducing energy use in the workplace; furthermore, supporting social energy behaviour in the workplace is likely to be a useful direction for promoting action.

Funding

This work was supported by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [grant numbers EP/K002589/1, EP/G065802/1, EP/MO2315X/1].

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