(AGI) Rome, July 8 - A conference on Energy Efficiency andTenements: Instructions for Use, was held on Wednesday at theAppeal Court in Rome, organised by Smart Energy Expo and theAlternative Investment Management Association (AIMA). One ofthe proposed solutions was for a bioclimatic hothouse,exploiting greenhouse gases whilst minimising thermaldispersion from the outside walls of multiple occupancybuildings. This was the seventh leg of the Smart Energy Tour,described as a "training and networking course". Energyrestructuring or redevelopment works in such buildings couldqualify for four different incentivisation measures, said MarioNucera of the Technical Energy Efficiency Unit of the Agencyfor New Technologies, Energy and the Environment (ENEA). Theseinclude 50 percent tax relief on building works, and 65 percent'ecobonuses', with thermal credits and energy efficiencycertificates, but the wider public is not fully aware of thesemechanisms. Nucera added that ENEA's recent annual report showsover two million taxpayers investing more than 22 billion eurosin energy redevelopment projects in their own homes, althoughmost incentive applications relate to components such asboilers, doors and windows. There have been far fewerapplications concerning opaque surfaces (outer wallinsulation). Figures for 2014 show that the property market wasdominated by Class G energy buildings, ranging between 63percent for three-room apartments and 72 percent for one roomapartments. Balconies, terraces, gardens and related structurescould become heat accumulators during the winter and outsideleisure areas during the summer, AIMA's Carla Melani said.Bioclimatic hothouses should be built according to smartprinciples, using particular techniques and fixtures. (AGI). .