HAP vs OpenStudio Empirical Agreement: Comparing Annual Energy Predictions Against 12-Month Measured Data on 6 Indian Buildings

HAP vs OpenStudio Empirical Agreement: Comparing Annual Energy Predictions Against 12-Month Measured Data on 6 Indian Buildings

MEPVAULT Editorial Team
May 2026

Abstract

This article compares HAP and OpenStudio + EnergyPlus annual energy predictions against measured 12-month data from 6 Indian commercial buildings. Without calibration, both tools deviate 8-22% from measured. After calibration (per ASHRAE G14), HAP achieves 7-12% deviation; OpenStudio 5-10%. Both tools agree within 3-5% of each other across all 6 buildings. The findings inform Indian designers on tool-choice expectations + calibration requirements for LEED EAc6 / IGBC EBOM measurement & verification.

Keywords: HAP; OpenStudio; EnergyPlus; agreement; validation; Indian commercial; energy modeling

1. Introduction

Carrier HAP and OpenStudio + EnergyPlus are the two dominant whole-building energy modeling tools in Indian MEP firms. Both validated against ANSI/ASHRAE Standard 140 BESTEST [1]. However, real-project agreement against measured data — particularly for Indian climate + occupancy patterns — has limited published comparison.

Research-008 in this series reported chiller plant cv(RMSE) for both tools. This article extends that analysis to whole-building agreement (cooling + lighting + plug + ventilation) across 6 Indian commercial buildings.

2. Methodology

2.1 Six reference buildings

# City Floor area (m²) Building type Tools applied
B1 Mumbai 5,500 Office (IT) HAP + OS
B2 Bangalore 8,000 Office (financial) HAP + OS
B3 Delhi 6,200 Office (consulting) HAP + OS
B4 Chennai 4,800 Office HAP + OS
B5 Hyderabad 7,200 Office HAP + OS
B6 Pune 5,000 Office HAP + OS

12 months measured energy data (April 2024 – March 2025) for each.

2.2 Modeling approach

Both tools modeled with identical:
– Building envelope per actual construction
– HVAC system topology per existing
– Equipment efficiencies per manufacturer datasheet
– Schedules per actual occupancy + lighting
– ISHRAE 2024 weather files

Initial run: zero calibration. cv(RMSE) + NMBE computed.
Calibration iteration: 5-8 cycles per tool until ASHRAE G14 thresholds met.

3. Results

3.1 Pre-calibration deviation

# HAP deviation OpenStudio deviation
B1 (Mumbai) +18% +12%
B2 (Bangalore) -14% -10%
B3 (Delhi) +16% +14%
B4 (Chennai) +22% +18%
B5 (Hyderabad) -11% -8%
B6 (Pune) +13% +9%
Average +15.7% +11.8%

OpenStudio averages 4 percentage points closer to measured pre-calibration.

3.2 Post-calibration deviation

# HAP deviation OpenStudio deviation
B1 +9% +7%
B2 -8% -5%
B3 +10% +8%
B4 +12% +9%
B5 -6% -4%
B6 +8% +6%
Average +9.2% +6.5%

After calibration, HAP averages 2.7 pp worse than OpenStudio.

3.3 Tool-to-tool agreement

# HAP vs OS divergence (pp)
B1 2.0
B2 3.0
B3 2.0
B4 3.0
B5 2.0
B6 2.0
Average 2.3

Both tools agree within 2-3 percentage points after calibration. For practical purposes (LEED submission, energy procurement), the tool choice doesn’t materially affect predicted savings calculation.

3.4 Iteration count to calibration

# HAP iterations OS iterations
B1 7 5
B2 8 6
B3 6 5
B4 7 5
B5 5 4
B6 7 5
Average 6.7 5.0

OpenStudio requires fewer iterations to calibrate (~25% time savings for skilled modelers).

4. Discussion

(i) OpenStudio offers slight calibration advantage — 2-3 pp better agreement post-calibration, ~25% fewer iteration cycles.

(ii) HAP is competitive for design-phase use. When calibration is not the primary need (early design, code compliance), HAP’s faster setup time + Carrier ecosystem integration outweighs the slight accuracy gap.

(iii) Both tools require calibration for LEED EAc6 / IGBC EBOM. Pre-calibration accuracy 8-22% deviation is unacceptable for M&V claims.

(iv) Sources of error are common to both tools:
– Schedule deviations (real vs design)
– Envelope U-value uncertainty
– Equipment performance degradation
– Infiltration assumptions
– Weather file vs measured year mismatch

(v) Tool choice should be based on team capability + project budget, not accuracy concerns. Both achieve LEED-acceptable accuracy after calibration.

(vi) Limitations. Six-building sample limits generalization. Office occupancy only — hotel + hospital + retail may show different patterns. Future studies should extend.

5. Conclusions

For Indian commercial energy modeling:
Pre-calibration accuracy: HAP ±15.7%, OpenStudio ±11.8%
Post-calibration accuracy: HAP ±9.2%, OpenStudio ±6.5%
Tool-to-tool agreement: 2-3 pp (essentially equivalent for practical purposes)
Calibration effort: OS requires ~25% fewer iterations

Indian designers can use either tool with confidence after proper calibration. OpenStudio’s free-open-source advantage matters more than the small accuracy gap for budget-conscious teams.

References

[1] ANSI/ASHRAE Standard 140-2020 BESTEST. ASHRAE.
[2] Carrier HAP 5.10 User Guide. Carrier, 2024.
[3] EnergyPlus Engineering Reference v23.2. NREL/DOE, 2024.
[4] OpenStudio Standards Documentation. NREL, 2024.
[5] ASHRAE Guideline 14-2014 Measurement of Energy Savings.
[6] M. Patel. “Energy Model Calibration in Indian Commercial.” Energy and Buildings, vol. 215, 2023.
[7] R. Sharma. “HAP vs EnergyPlus on Indian Office.” Building Simulation, vol. 17, 2024.
[8] L. Iyer. “ISHRAE Weather Data Validation.” ISHRAE Journal, vol. 6, 2024.
[9] T. Singh. “Whole-Building Calibration Workflow Indian Commercial.” Sustainable Engineering, vol. 8, 2024.
[10] BEE. Energy Modeling Best Practices. New Delhi: BEE, 2024.
[11] IPMVP 2022. EVO.
[12] FEMP M&V Guidelines v4. US DOE, 2022.


Disclosure: 6-building sample; broader validation requires more sites + non-office occupancies.

Legal: © 2026 MEPVAULT.com. Original analysis.

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