“…They may be clustered into four major factors for the unsuccess, and ranked according to the number of appearances: i) Technical. Distinct technical problems that may prevent the effective operation of the energy strategies are raised -the inefficiency of the systems (Dvorak et al, 2020;Fonseca et al, 2018;Kalkan et al, 2011;Pusat and Akkoyunlu, 2018;Ruth et al, 2019); the difficult, poor or inexistent maintenance (Forman et al, 2017;Koch, 2018) that may lead to the undesired deterioration of the equipment (Medrano et al, 2018); the mismatch between demand and supply in the case of RES (Kwan and Kwan, 2011;Wiryadinata et al, 2019); the low contribution of the action to the baseline improvement (Al Doury et al, 2020;Leon et al, 2020Leon et al, , 2018; the potential conflicts of adapting new technologies to historical buildings (Cho et al, 2020); or even the morphology of a campus that is not suitable for implementing a RES (Kwan and Hoffmann, 2010). Forman et al (2017) suggest some relevant factors which may cause the installed RES to only provide slight reductions in energy and emissions: the lack of post-occupancy evaluations by designers, due to the fact that projects are often commissioned externally and, therefore, there may be a gap between the estimated goals and the real performance in the use phase; and the organizational structures of institutions and the inappropriate attribution of competences and lack of skills among facility managers and maintenance staff.…”