ASHRAE 90.1 Appendix G Modeling: A Practical Workflow for Indian Projects

ASHRAE 90.1 Appendix G Performance Rating Method is the standard whole-building energy modeling protocol for LEED v4.1 EAc1 + IGBC v3 EE-1 + many international tenant compliance. For Indian projects, Appendix G is layered over the local ECBC 2017 baseline. Done well, it captures full energy savings credit; done poorly, it loses LEED + IGBC points.

This guide walks the practical 8-step workflow for an Indian commercial project.

What Appendix G actually requires

Appendix G defines two models:

  • Baseline (reference) building — built per ASHRAE 90.1 prescriptive requirements
  • Proposed (designed) building — actual project design

Both modeled in same simulation tool with identical climate + occupancy + schedules. Energy savings = (Baseline – Proposed) / Baseline.

Step 1: Climate zone identification

Per ASHRAE 169:

  • Mumbai = CZ 1A (Hot/Humid)
  • Chennai = CZ 1A
  • Delhi = CZ 2A or 3A (Mixed/Hot)
  • Bangalore = CZ 3A or 4A (Mild)
  • Pune = CZ 3A
  • Cochin = CZ 1A

Climate zone drives baseline equipment efficiency requirements.

Step 2: System type selection (baseline)

Appendix G prescribes a specific system type per building type + climate zone:

Building type Baseline system (CZ 2A India)
Office < 6,500 m² System 5 — Packaged VAV with electric reheat
Office > 6,500 m² System 7 — VAV with HW reheat
Hotel System 5
Retail System 6 — VAV with parallel fan-powered terminal
Hospital System 7
Healthcare clinic System 5

Note: ASHRAE 90.1 baseline does NOT use chilled-beam, DOAS, free cooling, or other advanced strategies. The proposed-case can use them — that’s where credit comes from.

Step 3: Baseline equipment efficiency

Set baseline to ASHRAE 90.1 Table 6.8.1 minimums:

Equipment Baseline efficiency
Chiller water-cooled centrifugal > 528 kW IPLV ≥ 6.30
Chiller air-cooled centrifugal > 528 kW IPLV ≥ 11.5 EER
Pump motors > 5.5 kW IE3
Fan motors > 5.5 kW IE3
LED lighting Per Table 9.5.1 LPD limits (~7.5 W/m² office)

The proposed-case typically uses 5-star equivalent (15-25% better than baseline).

Step 4: Building envelope (baseline)

Per ASHRAE 90.1 Table 5.5 by climate zone:

  • Wall U-value: 0.7-0.9 W/m²K typical CZ 1A
  • Roof U-value: 0.19-0.25 W/m²K
  • Window U-value: 4-6 W/m²K
  • Window-to-Wall Ratio: 40% maximum

Indian projects often have higher WWR (60% per ECBC); proposed-case captures the larger glass + better thermal performance.

Step 5: Occupancy + schedules

Same in both baseline + proposed. Realistic Indian commercial:

  • Office: M-F 8:00-19:00 occupied at 60% average; weekend 5%
  • Hotel: 24/7 with occupancy 70% average
  • Retail: M-Sun 10:00-22:00 at 45% average

ASHRAE 90.1 has default schedules; Indian projects can use those or substitute realistic Indian occupancy. Use whichever the AHJ accepts.

Step 6: Outdoor air

Baseline + proposed both must comply with ASHRAE 62.1. For Indian projects: NBC 2016 Pt 8 ACH minimums govern (typically higher than ASHRAE 62.1). Use NBC values in both models.

Step 7: Run baseline + proposed

Run both simulations through annual hourly energy calculation. Tools: HAP, eQUEST, EnergyPlus + OpenStudio.

Output:

  • Annual energy use breakdown (cooling, heating, fans, pumps, lighting, plug)
  • Peak demand
  • Energy cost (using project-specific tariff)
  • Energy savings = (Baseline – Proposed) / Baseline

Step 8: Document + submit

LEED submission requires:

  • Full simulation report with both models documented
  • Energy savings table by end-use
  • Annual cost savings (using project tariff)
  • Equipment + system comparison table

Typical Indian commercial energy savings vs Appendix G baseline:

  • Standard design: 5-15% savings (LEED EAp2 minimum)
  • Good design: 25-35% (LEED EAc1 = 6-8 points)
  • Premium design: 40-50% (LEED EAc1 = 10-14 points)
  • Net-zero ready: 60%+ (LEED EAc1 = 14+ points)

Worked example: 10,000 m² Mumbai office

Climate Zone: 1A (ASHRAE)

Baseline system: System 5 packaged VAV with electric reheat

Baseline annual energy: 2,800 MWh = 280 kWh/m²/yr

Proposed-case strategies:

  • DOAS + chilled beam (System type override): -25%
  • ERV: -8%
  • Free cooling waterside economiser: -5% (Mumbai limited)
  • DCV: -8%
  • LED + DALI: -10%
  • VFDs: -5%
  • Combined (with diminishing returns): ~38%

Proposed-case annual energy: 1,750 MWh = 175 kWh/m²/yr

Savings: 38% = LEED EAc1 = 8 points (above 36% threshold)

Capex premium: ~₹2-3 crore vs baseline = ~₹250-300/m²

Opex saving: ~₹1-1.5 crore/year

Payback: 2-3 years

Common Appendix G modeling mistakes

1. Different schedules in baseline vs proposed. The two models must use identical schedules; differences compromise comparability.

2. Baseline modeled with proposed-case enhancements. Forgetting that baseline doesn’t have DOAS, free cooling, etc.

3. Proposed-case at unrealistic 100% efficiency. Specify realistic equipment performance, not best-in-catalogue.

4. Ignoring infiltration in baseline. Baseline has 0.4 cfm/sf at 75 Pa; proposed often misses this assumption.

5. No envelope upgrade modeled. Indian projects with 50%+ WWR get bigger savings vs 40% WWR baseline; capture this.

Quick checklist

  • [ ] Climate zone correctly identified per ASHRAE 169
  • [ ] Baseline system type per building type table
  • [ ] Baseline equipment minima per Table 6.8.1
  • [ ] Baseline envelope per Table 5.5 climate zone
  • [ ] Both models same occupancy + schedules
  • [ ] Both models comply with ASHRAE 62.1 / NBC 2016 OA
  • [ ] Energy savings ≥ 5% (LEED EAp2 minimum)
  • [ ] Documentation per LEED EAc1 submission

References: ASHRAE 90.1-2022 Appendix G; LEED v4.1 BD+C EAc1; IGBC v3 EE-1; ASHRAE 169:2020 Climate Data; ECBC 2017 (companion).

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