
How efficient is your house? Map project plans to publish ratings for all Calgary, Edmonton homes
CBC
Albertans living in Calgary and Edmonton will soon be able to see how efficient their neighbours' homes are.
An Alberta environmental charity and a software company plan to rate the energy efficiency of every single-family home in both cities and publish the ratings online this fall.
The aim of the pilot is to combat climate change by encouraging Albertans to make energy upgrades to their homes.
"Studies have shown that the first three-to-five years after purchase is the most likely time to do upgrades and renovations, so by partnering with realtors in Calgary and Edmonton, we're hoping to put this information into the hands of realtors and their clients," said Jessica Lajoie, a program specialist for the Alberta Ecotrust Foundation.
The pilot project, which has a budget of about $400,000, would build on the City of Edmonton's home energy map, which shows the energy efficiency of a fraction of the city's homes.
That map shows only homes with EnerGuide labels — official ratings given to energy-audited homes — but the pilot would assess residential energy efficiency on a much wider scale.
"We're going to set a score for every single house in Edmonton and Calgary right off the bat," said James Riley, the CEO and founder of Lightspark, a Vancouver software company making a six-figure in-kind contribution to the project.
The company will use artificial intelligence and machine learning to generate the ratings.
Its ratings will not be as accurate as those resulting from home audits but, Riley said, his company has spent two and a half years making sense of vast amounts of municipal and federal data and studying patterns in homes that have already been inspected.
"We've found that it's actually fairly accurate because most of the post-war houses were built in a very particular way," he said.
In 2015, the company performed a similar but less-sophisticated energy analysis of thousands of homes in Nova Scotia, learning people wanted a convenient tool that simplified what can be a complicated landscape of energy metrics and government grants.
Lightspark plans to launch a beta version of the pilot this summer and roll out the official maps in the fall.
A consumer-centric portal that includes information on grant opportunities and allows people to submit upgrades to improve their score will also be included and homeowners who don't like the idea of their rating being online will be able to opt out.
Successful rollouts in Alberta's biggest cities could pave the way for similar maps across the country.