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Mining for Energy Efficiency Opportunities in NYC Buildings

Written By empapat on Rabu, 19 September 2012 | 07.32

If markets thrive on information, then New York City recently unlocked a gold mine for the energy efficiency industry.

The city became the first in the US to make public how well (or poorly) each large, private building within its borders performs when it comes to energy and water use. A city website displays information about 2,065 large commercial properties, encompassing 530 million square feet.

Building owners were required by law to participate in the program, part of Mayor Michael Bloomberg's 'PlaNYC' goal to reduce carbon dioxide emissions 30 percent by 2030.

 "I know data isn't always exciting, but the takeaway here is that a city even as large and sophisticated as New York knows almost nothing about its privately owned buildings and how those privately owned buildings use energy," said Andrew Burr, director of building energy performance policy at the Institute for Market Transformation, a non-profit working with New York and several other cities on green building plans.

The evaluation painted a sometimes surprising picture of New York (mostly Manhattan). For example, New York has more energy efficient buildings than the nation as a whole. Its newer buildings tend to use more energy than older structures. Larger office buildings are often more energy intensive than smaller ones. And neighborhoods with less efficient buildings tend to have higher asthma rates.

Found here, the information is valuable to building owners, government, real estate buyers and energy efficiency service companies.

Using the data, building owners are able to see how much energy – and money – they waste and take corrective action. City government gains a better understanding of programs and policies that will help improve buildings. Those buying or leasing real estate gain a more clear picture of the value a building. And energy efficiency companies, consultants, and energy technology providers have an opportunity to see where specific opportunities lie.

For building owners, participation was relatively painless, according to Burr. In a process that took 5 to 15 hours, depending on the complexity of the structure, owners gathered information on utility bills, building specs and other data and ran it through the Environmental Protection Agency's Energy Star Portfolio Manager, a tool to track and assess a building's performance for energy and water use.

New York City already had disclosed similar information for its 2,657 municipal buildings, which total 273 million square feet. All large buildings in the city will participate annually in the benchmarking exercise. Large residential buildings are slated to report next fall.

"New York has just taken a giant leap for transparency: this is the largest publication ever of metered energy performance data from buildings in a single city," said Cliff Majersik, IMT's executive director. "Markets need information to function, and this will let New Yorkers know how much energy the buildings around them are using. It will allow them to get crucial real-estate information that hasn't been available until now."

Elisa Wood is a long-time energy writer. Subscribe to her free energy efficiency newsletter at RealEnergyWriters.com.

Lead image: Manhattan buildings via Shutterstock

19 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/blog/post/2012/09/mining-for-energy-efficiency-opportunities-in-nyc-buildings?cmpid=rss
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France Taxing Carbon Emitters in an Effort to Overhaul Consumer Energy Costs

Written By empapat on Senin, 17 September 2012 | 06.42

Making more people eligible for so-called "social" utility rates will make energy more accessible, he said in a speech at an environment conference in Paris. Existing law allows for 1 million households to benefit, he said.

The 2013 budget will include a "general tax" on businesses that contribute to air pollution, he said. The government also plans to review the CSPE tax on electricity bills that goes toward paying the higher costs of renewable energy.

President Francois Hollande has embarked on a plan to lower France's reliance on nuclear power and overhaul energy costs for consumers. Electricite de France SA and GDF Suez SA, the Paris- based former monopolies, have the rates that they charge households in their home market regulated by the government.

A draft law aimed at boosting energy efficiency and lowering demand would make rules on the tariffs more complex because they will depend on home insulation and revenues.

"I want to encourage moderation in energy use," Ayrault said today. Under the plan, the government wants 1 million homes renovated annually for which financial aid will be available, he said.

Business Costs

"What worries us the most is how much this will cost and who will pay," Laurence Parisot, head of the business organization Medef, said after the conference on the government's energy policies and the planned pollution tax. "We can't keep raising costs for companies without a big impact on jobs and competitiveness."

The government will also start tenders by the end of the year for two offshore wind parks near Le Treport in the Channel and Noirmoutier island off the Atlantic coast, as well as large- scale solar installations, Ayrault said. This will be accompanied by a streamlining of administrative procedures for development of onshore turbines.

EDF and partners including turbine maker Alstom SA won in April a French government tender to build three offshore wind farms, while Iberdrola SA got one. That first round was for almost 2,000 megawatts that will add an estimated 1.1 billion euros to household electricity bills when the wind farms are running, the government has said.

France, which doesn't yet have any offshore wind power, plans to install 6,000 megawatts of offshore wind, tidal and wave power by 2020 to boost clean energy.

Lead image: wind turbines via shutterstock

17 Sep, 2012


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Source: http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2012/09/france-taxing-carbon-emitters-in-an-effort-to-overhaul-consumer-energy-costs?cmpid=rss
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