In 1999, the US
Department of Energy projected that office equipment would be the fastest-growing commercial end use between 1998 and 2020. The Commercial Buildings Energy Consumption Survey (CBECS), a national sample survey project of the US
Energy Information Administration, reported that based on 2003 data, 19% of the total energy of US office buildings is attributed to plug load energy use (office equipment, computers, and other energy use). One confounding factor with estimating plug load energy use is the discrepancy between the rated or nameplate energy power consumption and the actual average power consumption, which can be as little as 10-15% of the nameplate value. Office equipment and other plug loads emit heat which may require the building to supply additional cooling, a side-effect which contributes to total energy consumption. However, when heating is needed, waste heat from plug loads also supplies part of the energy requirement for heating. Heating a space with
electric heating is environmentally less effective than using the electricity for
heat pumps, however if the electricity is being consumed anyway this is not a factor. == Plug load energy efficiency ==