financing building energy efficiency
By Nancy Goody
green_buildingOn Wednesday -- the same day that the Supreme Court upheld President Obama's health care law -- the U.S. Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee heard testimony on new developments for financing building energy efficiency -- developments that do not depend on ongoing federal involvement.

With the court decision as news competition, it would have been easy to not have heard about the hearing. Though it was a narrow glimpse into a large, dynamic and growing industry, this was important and merits attention. A few key takeaways below show why. 

First, one point of background. Building owners have many reasons to invest in energy efficiency -- it reduces expenses, makes for a more comfortable and productive space, improves property values, and reduces toxic pollution -- all at once.  

Increasingly, building owners are making investments in efficiency that are "gateway" measures - by taking a few steps, they realize postive returns that cause them to look for more opportunities. Still many sensible investments are not made for various reasons, such as the fact that building tenants often pay the utility bills but the owner must make most of the efficiency investments, and becasue many building owners may not have information on possible savings, and tenants on a tight move-in schedule might not explore simple lighting controls that can pay for themselves and more in short order. Even with appetite to invest, barriers inhibit investment.

The testimony of Jeffrey DeBoer -- CEO of the Real Estate Roundtable (RER) -- is extremely interesting on this point, as much for who he is as what he said. The RER is a group of highly sophisticated property owners -- its members include the owners, managers, and developers of some of the largest and most valuable buildings in the country. These are property owners who understand investments, markets, and buildings, and their testimony Wednesday essentially said that energy efficiency is important to them, important to their businesses, and better policies are needed. The testimony is here.
 
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