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Energy Information - Degree Days

Degree days

Degree-day figures quantify how hot or cold the weather has been as a single index number for the region and month (or week). They allow you to account properly for the effect of weather on energy consumption.

You can use degree-day data to:

  • Expose abnormal seasonal patterns of consumption
  • Detect exceptional consumption caused by faults
  • Set and track fuel budgets
  • Normalise the performance of different buildings to a common basis for comparison purposes
  • Verify and quantify the savings achieved by energy-saving measures after allowing for weather variations
  • Extrapolate annual consumption from a limited period of monitoring
  • Estimate the peak daily demand

What are Degree Days?

Degree Days is the rate of heat loss from a building, (related to the building fabric) and the temperature difference between the inside and outside of a building - the greater the temperature difference the more heat will be lost. It is not possible to directly compare your building's performance from consumption data alone as weather conditions vary from month to month and year to year.

Heating degree days are a measure of the severity and duration of cold weather, the colder the weather in a given month the higher the degree day value. If you take these into account it is possible to compare one year with another and to determine whether any initiatives have resulted in energy savings or there are problems with your building that need to be addressed.

The base temperature used to calculate degree days in the UK is 15.5oC

At this temperature most UK buildings can heat themselves without the need for supplementary heating, due to the internal gains from occupants and equipment and the solar gains through the building fabric, i.e. the walls and windows.
Degree days is a measure of the difference between the baseline and the actual outdoor temperature multiplied by the number of days. E.g. the temperature measured hourly records a temperature of:

7.5ºC for 48 hours the degree days total would be: (15.5 - 7.5) x 2 = 16

If the temperature is above the baseline then the degree days are set to zero.

Standard Degree Day Report for March 2008
Degree days are measured in 18 locations across the country, here is the data for last month:

March 2008
Region Mar 2008 Mar 2007 Mar 20 year average
1 Thames Valley 250216232
2 South Eastern 280260259
3 Southern 280249258
4 South Western 247211231
5 Severn Valley 258242233
6 Midland 292260270
7 West Pennines 314238266
8 North Western 318267287
9 Borders 302277287
10 North Eastern 292264280
11 East Pennines 291255268
12 East Anglia 298252272
13 West Scotland 314272292
14 East Scotland 316280296
15 NE Scotland 337269306
16 Wales 274260263
17 Northern Ireland 299282279
18 NW Scotland 327278303


More Information

Historical Data (pdf)

Degree Days For Energy Management (pdf)