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Energy Efficiency in Commercial Buildings: Labeling in NM Tammy Fiebelkorn Presentation to NM Association of Energy Engineers Sigler Albuquerque December 14, 2010
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Value of Energy Efficiency Reduced Operating Costs Reduced Finite Resource Use Reduced Environmental Impacts
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Obstacles to Energy Efficiency NMAEE Members: Lack of Public Awareness & Education Up-front Costs Fits well with SWEEP’s studies and experience Add: Change is Scary!
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Overcoming Obstacles to EE Government Regulations – “Sticks” NMAEE Regulations Changes to business practices NM Examples 2009 NMECC – base requirements for new commercial buildings SB200 – higher standards for new or renovated public buildings
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Overcoming Obstacles to EE Government Incentives – “Carrots” NMAEE Financial incentives Preferential tax treatment Utility incentives NM Examples NM Sustainable Buildings Tax Credit Efficient Use of Energy Act – requires “all cost effective” DSM programs
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Overcoming Obstacles to EE Increasing Awareness NMAEE Wide variety of ideas NM Examples 2009 NMECC – statewide training to local communities Increased marketing of utility programs Energy Use Disclosure – legislation potential
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Energy Use Disclosure/Labeling Provides for increased public awareness Brings EE into the list of issues that market decisions are based upon Public Support: In our NMAEE survey: 85% support this concept Echoed in other surveys and discussions
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Labeling Benefits Energy transparency in the market Creating competition based on energy efficiency will save consumers money and result in more efficient buildings (retrofits, management and behavior)
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Labeling Benefits Helps us understand building performance We know very little about how the 80 billion- square-foot commercial building stock consumes energy More building energy knowledge = smarter policies, more effective incentives, better building operations Long-term goal is data at tenant space, systems and equipment levels We can’t manage what we aren’t measuring
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Labeling Benefits Increases accountability for building performance “Design-Performance Gap” - Buildings aren’t being operated as intended Benchmarking will reveal well-operated vs. underperforming buildings Will help align predicted and actual performance by creating a feedback loop among architects, engineers, operators and tenants
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Labeling Benefits – Long Term Source: Institute for Market Transformation
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Labeling Benefits – Long Term Source: Institute for Market Transformation Price Premiums
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Labeling - Not a New Concept Labeling is required for many products
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Labeling in the U.S. Source: Institute for Market Transformation
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NY Labeling Requirements Enacted in 2009 Most advanced package of energy efficiency laws for existing buildings in the nation Requires: Energy Star Benchmarking & Disclosure Water Benchmarking Audits Tenant sub metering Lighting upgrades Code compliance for renovations
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DC Labeling Requirements
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International Labeling Energy Performance of Buildings Directive (EPBD) adopted by European Union in 2002 to help meet Kyoto targets Australia Building Energy Efficiency Disclosure Act enacted July 2010 Building label in China developed by Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Development
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Labeling Options Benchmarking the relative energy performance of buildings and disclosing info to market Asset rating Measures structural performance Operational rating Measures actual performance (utility bills)
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Labeling Options
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Portfolio Manager Operational rating Most popular commercial building rating tool in nation “1” to “100” rating compared to peer buildings nationwide Free, online and nontechnical Not an audit Normalizes for climate, occupancy, density, plug loads and other factors Built-in recognition for top achievers
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Portfolio Manager Source: Institute for Market Transformation
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NM Legislation Proposal Require disclosure of Portfolio Manager rating/report All commercial and industrial buildings Does not include multi-family
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NM Legislation Proposal Phase-In Schedule 2012 – 200,000 sq ft and over 2013 – 100,000 sq ft and over 2014 – 5,000 sq ft and over
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NM Legislation Proposal Disclosure Trigger: Upon listing for sale or rent Yearly disclosure is an option NMAEE Members – 64% prefer yearly disclosure NY NY Program is an example Potential Drawbacks for NM: Cost of setting up centralized database and website for reporting Building owners without plans for rental or sale may not want to have public disclosure
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NM Legislation Proposal Utility Role: Provide usage data for entire buildings All public buildings Commercial buildings upon request from building owner/operator Data needs to be in a format that allows importation into Portfolio Manager Building compilation data has to maintain confidentiality
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NM Legislation Proposal Size Requirements: Small buildings excluded 5,000 sq ft and under Other options: NMAEE Members 37% = All buildings Drawbacks: too small for software, seen as onerous for “mom and pops” 27% = 10,000 sq ft 18% = 5,000 sq ft 18% = “Other”
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NM Legislation Proposal Public Building Requirements All public buildings required to disclose their Portfolio Manager rating Yearly Posted online NMAEE – 92% agree Public Building Requirements All public buildings required to disclose their Portfolio Manager rating Yearly Posted online NMAEE – 92% agree
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NM Legislative Proposal Legislative support Bi-partisan appeal Little to no fiscal impact for state, building owners Support market decision making
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NM Legislative Proposal Community support #1 Priority for CCAE #1 Priority for EANM Want to add: energy auditors building owners & managers engineers tenants architects NMAEE and this audience!
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SWEEP: Dedicated to More Efficient Energy Use in the Southwest Resources available online at: www.swenergy.org Tammy Fiebelkorn, NM Representative 505-410-3884 tfiebelkorn@swenergy.org
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