LEED v4.1 EA Optimize Energy Performance — Option 1 vs Option 2 for Indian Projects
By MEPVAULT Editorial Team · MEP Consultant · Sustainability · 11 May 2026
Reading time ~ 8 min · Originally published: 02 May 2026 · Last revised: 11 May 2026
LEED v4.1 BD+C EA Optimize Energy Performance offers up to 18 credit points — the largest pool in the rating. Option 1 (whole-building simulation per ASHRAE 90.1-2016 App G) vs Option 2 (prescriptive ECMs). On a 40,000 m² Hyderabad office, Option 1 simulation returns 25.1 % cost savings = 11 EA credit points plus 3 from renewable + 2 from Enhanced Commissioning = 16/18. The three modelling pitfalls that wreck Indian LEED submissions: baseline System Type, schedule diversity, climate file selection.
LEED v4.1 BD+C — the two EA Optimize Energy Performance pathways
LEED v4.1 BD+C EA Optimize Energy Performance offers up to 18 credit points — the largest single point pool in the entire rating system. There are two pathways: Option 1 (Whole-building energy simulation) requires an energy model per ASHRAE 90.1-2016 Appendix G with proposed-vs-baseline cost savings. Option 2 (Prescriptive ECMs + Building Performance Score) skips the energy model and uses the ASHRAE Standard 100 or BPS approach.
Option 1 vs Option 2 — when each one wins
| Project type | Recommended option | Why |
|---|---|---|
| New office tower > 25,000 m² | Option 1 | Whole-building modelling is mandatory anyway for ECBC compliance; reuse the model |
| Hospital with complex zone schedule | Option 1 | Cannot capture critical/non-critical schedule diversity in Option 2 |
| Hotel < 200 keys | Option 2 | Smaller team; ECM-based approach faster; comparable points |
| Retrofit of existing building | Option 1 (using calibrated model) | Pre/post comparison + ASHRAE Guideline 14 calibration required |
| Office tenant fit-out | Option 2 | Whole-building modelling out of scope; ECM aggregation works |
| Data centre | Option 1 with PUE submission | Cannot represent IT load in ECM-only approach |
| Industrial / manufacturing | Option 1 | Process loads need explicit modelling |
| Educational < 10,000 m² | Option 2 | Smaller team; ECM checklist simpler |
A worked Hyderabad office — Option 1 simulation result
40,000 m² office, ASHRAE 90.1-2016 App G baseline (Appendix G is mandatory for v4.1 — App K is no longer accepted). EnergyPlus simulation with TMY3 weather:
| End use | Baseline (kWh/m²/yr) | Proposed (kWh/m²/yr) | % reduction |
|---|---|---|---|
| Interior lighting | 15.2 | 9.8 | 35.5 % |
| Exterior lighting | 0.8 | 0.4 | 50.0 % |
| Cooling | 45.0 | 28.5 | 36.7 % |
| Heating (negligible Hyderabad) | 0.5 | 0.2 | 60.0 % |
| Fans + pumps | 12.5 | 7.8 | 37.6 % |
| Plug + process | 35.0 | 35.0 | 0 % |
| Service hot water | 3.5 | 2.6 | 25.7 % |
| Total | 112.5 | 84.3 | 25.1 % |
| Cost (₹/m²/yr) at ₹8.5/kWh | 956 | 716 | 25.1 % |
25.1 % cost savings = 11 credit points on the EA ladder (v4.1 threshold table: 12 % = 1 point ascending to 50 % = 18 points). Combined with 3 points from on-site renewable (3 % of energy from rooftop solar) and 2 points from Enhanced Commissioning, the project lands at 16 of 18 EA points — a Platinum-tier energy package.
Three modelling pitfalls that wreck Indian LEED submissions
- ASHRAE 90.1 Appendix G baseline System Type — Indian office typically maps to System 8 (VAV with PFP boxes). The baseline forces gas heating which Indian projects do not have. Treat baseline rigorously per the prescriptive map even though it produces an artificial result.
- Operating schedule diversity — Indian offices run different floors at different occupancy. Default ASHRAE schedules over-state energy use. Use measured data from the previous campus or industry benchmarks.
- Climate file selection — ASHRAE-prepared IWEC2 files for Mumbai, Delhi, Chennai, Bengaluru, Hyderabad. Use IWEC2, not TMY3 (which is US-derived). Hyderabad office on TMY3 vs IWEC2 differs ~8 % in cooling kWh.
References
- LEED v4.1 BD+C Reference Guide — U.S. Green Building Council 2024, EA Optimize Energy Performance credit.
- ASHRAE Standard 90.1-2016 Appendix G — Performance Rating Method (current for LEED v4.1).
- ASHRAE Standard 100-2018 — Energy Efficiency in Existing Buildings (for Option 2 prescriptive pathway).
- ASHRAE Guideline 14-2014 — Measurement of Energy, Demand, and Water Savings (for retrofit baseline calibration).
- IWEC2 Climate Data — ASHRAE International Weather for Energy Calculations (Indian city files 2024).
- Energy Conservation Building Code 2017 + 2024 — Bureau of Energy Efficiency GoI.
- EnergyPlus + OpenStudio NREL — software platforms acceptable per LEED.
- IGBC Green New Buildings v3.0 — EE-1 credit for cross-reference.
// About the Authors
MEPVAULT Editorial Team — A team of practising MEP consultants based in India. ISHRAE-affiliated; FSAI-aligned.
