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Policy Utilization Strategies and Application Scenario Analysis of the Jeju-Type Building Energy Efficiency Management Target System

  • Journal of The Korea Society of Computer and Information
  • Abbr : JKSCI
  • 2026, 31(5), pp.227~239
  • Publisher : The Korean Society Of Computer And Information
  • Research Area : Engineering > Computer Science
  • Received : April 1, 2026
  • Accepted : April 22, 2026
  • Published : May 29, 2026

Dong-Min Lee 1

1제주대학교

Accredited

ABSTRACT

This study examines the Jeju-Type Building Energy Efficiency Management Target System from a policy-utilization perspective and proposes a feasible three-stage implementation strategy for its practical adoption. Rather than treating the system as a technical framework for measuring building performance alone, the study reframes it as a policy tool that can support priority setting, incentive design, and management of high-energy-use buildings. Energy Use Intensity (EUI) is adopted as the core indicator because it enables comparative evaluation across building groups and provides a quantitative basis for selecting policy targets. Based on this perspective, the study presents a staged rollout pathway consisting of: (i) public-sector first application, (ii) targeted management of high-energy-use private buildings, and (iii) incentive-based expansion for broader voluntary participation. The first stage focuses on refining standards and accumulating operational experience through public buildings. The second stage aims to maximize policy effectiveness by concentrating support and minimum management requirements on energy-intensive private buildings. The third stage emphasizes predictable incentives, simplified procedures, and standardized support packages in order to promote market-wide diffusion. The study concludes that the proposed phased approach can enhance policy credibility, effectiveness, and acceptability in Jeju. It also identifies future tasks, including more detailed segmentation of target buildings, stronger support packages, and institutional responses to acceptability issues such as landlord–tenant split incentives and the constraints faced by small businesses.

Citation status

* References for papers published after 2024 are currently being built.