California Debuts ''Green
California'' Web Site
California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger's administration unveiled this
week a sweeping new "Green California" Web site, based on his vision of
an energy efficient and environmentally friendly California. The new Web
site is filled with ideas, guidelines, reference materials, engineering
data and environmentally friendly purchasing information to assist state
and local government agencies and California businesses with the shift
toward environmental sustainability, energy conservation and the
reduction of landfill waste.
"We believe this new Web site will become the primary "go to" site--the
new, centralized, electronic reference library--for engineers,
architects, building managers, contractors, purchasing agents and other
business and government officials and environmentalists in their quest
for a Green California,'" said State and Consumer Services Agency
Secretary Rosario Marin.
"It will be a constantly expanding resource, as more and more links, Web
pages and data are added. We believe it will demonstrate with facts and
figures that environmentally smart business decisions can also save big
bucks, while making life healthier for all of us."
The Web site is focused primarily
on two broad areas. It provides, in a single location, vital reference
materials for the design, construction, benchmarking and operation of
"green buildings." It also provides government and business purchasing
officials with detailed information on environmentally friendly products
and services, such as office supplies, paper products, office machines,
vehicle supplies, building materials, medical supplies, etc.
In a December 2004 executive order, Governor Schwarzenegger launched an
action plan to reduce California's energy purchases for the thousands of
state-owned buildings by 20 percent by 2015, while conserving other
scarce natural resources. The executive order also urged local
governments, K-12 schools, universities, community colleges and business
organizations to adopt the same ambitious goals. The new Web site
provides vital reference material and "how to do it" guidelines to
implement that vision.
The governor proposed to achieve the 20 percent energy reduction by
designing, constructing, operating and renovating state-owned buildings
to meet the standards of the U.S. Green Building Council's Leadership in
Energy and Environmental Design silver rating ("LEED Silver") and by
leasing office space in buildings with a federal "Energy Star"
rating--both of which are explained on the Web site. He also directed
the State Architect in the California Department of General Services to
adopt guidelines to encourage California schools built with state funds
to be resource and energy efficient.
In the private sector, the governor pointed out that commercial
buildings use 36 percent of California's electricity and account for a
large percentage of greenhouse gas emissions, raw material consumption
and waste. By adopting the practices outlined in his executive order,
Schwarzenegger said, California could save $2 billion of the $12 billion
in electricity consumed every year by the state's commercial and
institutional buildings.
California law now requires all departments of state government to
practice EnvironmentalIy Preferable Purchasing (EPP), buying goods and
services that have a reduced impact on human health and the environment.
The "Green California" Web site includes a complete online version of
the EPP Best Practices Manual. Among other things, it shows officials
how to write environmental specifications into their bid solicitations.
Published 02/10/2006
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2005 Greenmedia Publishing Ltd. |