Host: Tom Angus, Director of Conferences, Decarb Connect
Guest: Tom Fenton, CEO, Senze
In partnership with Urban Future Lab
The UK's housing stock is responsible for a significant share of the country's carbon emissions, and the estimated cost of retrofitting it sits at an eye-watering £500 billion. But what if a large portion of that spend is being directed at the wrong interventions, based on certificates and models that don't reflect how buildings actually perform?
In this second episode of our mini-series in collaboration with Urban Future Lab, Tom is joined by Tom Fenton, CEO and Co-Founder of Senze. They discuss how live sensor data and digital twin technology are exposing the gap between buildings 'as designed' and buildings as 'lived in', and why measuring first could transform both the economics and the impact of the UK's net zero retrofit mission.
Tom Fenton co-founded Senze alongside David Partridge of Related Argent and Joseph Daniels of Project Etopia - a lineup that brings together data science, large-scale property development, and net zero housebuilding in a single founding team. Tom previously built Veritherm, where he first encountered the persistent gap between modelled and actual building performance.
Senze deploys live sensors directly into buildings to capture real-time data on energy use and thermal behaviour, combining that with digital twin models to deliver actionable insights for building owners, landlords, and large estate managers - from housing associations in Northern Ireland to portfolios in New York.
What you’ll take away:
- Why the EPC system is fundamentally broken and why one Senze pilot found a home performing 59% better than its rating predicted
- How Senze’s combination of live sensors and digital twin models gives building owners something neither approach can deliver alone
- Why the £500 billion retrofit cost estimate could be dramatically reduced by measuring buildings before intervening in them
- What working on portfolios in New York has revealed about the universality of the performance gap problem
- Whether the government’s proposed EPC C standards for landlords by 2028–2030 will drive genuine improvement or simply a compliance scramble
- Why open, shared building performance data infrastructure, as championed by the Live Data Trust may be as important as any individual technology
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What is Decarb Connect?
Examining the strategies and deployments around decarbonisation in hard to abate sectors, we speak with CEOs, heads of corporate strategy, CTOs, Innovation/R&D, project directors & heads of carbon management from around the world. Hosted by Alex Cameron of the Decarbonization Leaders Network and Decarb Connect & produced by Janno Media.