| Promote Green Buildings For Cuts In North 
    American CO2 Emissions 3/17/2008
 
 Promoting the green design, construction, renovation and operation of 
    buildings could cut North American greenhouse gas emissions that are 
    fuelling climate change more deeply, quickly and cheaply than any other 
    available measure, according to a new report issued by the trinational 
    Commission for Environmental Cooperation (CEC).
 
 North America’s buildings cause the annual release of more than 2,200 
    megatons of CO2 into the atmosphere, about 35 percent of the continent’s 
    total. The report says rapid market uptake of currently available and 
    emerging advanced energy-saving technologies could result in over 1,700 
    fewer megatons of CO2 emissions in 2030, compared to projected emissions 
    that year following a business-as-usual approach. A cut of that size would 
    nearly equal the CO2 emitted by the entire US transportation sector in 2000.
 
 It is common now for more advanced green buildings to routinely reduce 
    energy usage by 30, 40, or even 50 percent over conventional buildings, with 
    the most efficient buildings now performing more than 70 percent better than 
    conventional properties, according to the report.
 
 Despite proven environmental, economic and health benefits, however, green 
    building today accounts for a only small fraction of new home and commercial 
    building construction—just two percent of the new non-residential building 
    market, less than half of one percent of the residential market in the 
    United States and Canada, and less than that in Mexico.
 
 The report, Green Building in North America: Opportunities and Challenges, 
    is the result of a two-year study by the CEC Secretariat. It was prepared 
    with advice from an international advisory group of prominent developers and 
    architects, sustainability and energy experts, real estate appraisers and 
    brokers, together with local and national government representatives.
 
 “Improving our built environment is probably the single greatest opportunity 
    to protect and enhance the natural environment. This report is a blueprint 
    for dramatic environmental progress throughout North America—mostly using 
    the tools and technology we have on hand today,” says CEC Executive Director 
    Adrián Vázquez. “Green building represents some of the ripest ‘low-hanging 
    fruit’ for achieving significant reductions in climate change emissions.”
 
 Even with rapid growth projected in the green building market across all 
    three countries, the report says public and private sectors must embrace 
    substantial changes to the planning, development and financing of commercial 
    and residential buildings to overcome what it says are significant barriers 
    to the widespread adoption of high-performance buildings throughout North 
    America.
 
 Jonathan Westeinde, managing partner of The Windmill Development Group in 
    Ottawa and the CEC’s advisory group chair, states “As a developer, I rely on 
    the fact that green building is a proven concept—with construction costs and 
    market benefits that are rapidly improving. This report shows what is needed 
    to scale up and put green building at the heart of a healthy, energy-secure 
    North America.”
 
 The report highlights the importance of green building in urban development. 
    Seattle Mayor Greg Nickels, whose city hosted a CEC symposium on green 
    building in May 2007, states, “Green building is a cornerstone for creating 
    strong, sustainable communities. In Seattle, we are convinced that cities 
    that make the commitment and investment in green development now will have a 
    significant advantage in the long run.”
 
 Report authors describe a number of disincentives to green building to be 
    overcome. For example, how to encourage developers to incur the marginal 
    cost of green building features when the long-term energy-saving benefits 
    will be passed on to the new owners or tenants.
 
 They recommend ways to accelerate the market uptake of green building and 
    make it the standard practice for all new construction and renovation of 
    existing buildings in North America. Among its recommendations, the report 
    calls upon North American government, industry and nongovernmental leaders 
    to:
 
 * Create national, multi-stakeholder task forces charged with achieving a 
    vision for green building in North America;
 * Support the creation of a North American set of principles and planning 
    tools for green building;
 * Set clear targets to achieve the most rapid possible adoption of green 
    building in North America, including aggressive targets for carbon-neutral 
    or net zero-energy buildings, together with performance monitoring to track 
    progress towards these targets;
 * Enhance ongoing or new support for green building, including efforts to 
    promote private sector investment and proper valuation methods; and
 * Increase knowledge of green building through research and development, 
    capacity building, and the use of labels and disclosures on green building 
    performance.
 
 The recommendations complement ongoing efforts by federal, state/provincial 
    and local governments as well as industry and trade associations and 
    nongovernmental organizations.
 
 The CEC study notes several government and industry initiatives that promote 
    aggressive energy performance improvements in the building sector. One study 
    completed for the report signals the potential of green building to yield 
    tremendous energy improvements and greenhouse gas emissions reductions in 
    the building sector by 2030, and suggests a path toward zero net-energy and 
    carbon-neutral buildings.
 
 Background Information
 
 # CEC Report: Green Building in North America: Opportunities and Challenges 
    According to the report:
 # In Canada, buildings are responsible for:
 
 * 33 percent of total energy use;
 * 12 percent of non-industrial water consumption;
 * 50 percent of natural resource consumption;
 * 35 percent of greenhouse gas emissions;
 * 10 percent of airborne particulate production; and
 * 25 percent of landfill waste generation.
 
 In Mexico, buildings are responsible for:
 
 * 17 percent of total energy use;
 * 5 percent of potable water consumption;
 * 25 percent of total electricity consumption;
 * 20 percent of all carbon dioxide emissions; and
 * 20 percent of the waste generated.
 
 In the United States, buildings account for:
 
 * 40 percent of total energy use;
 * 12 percent of the total water consumption;
 * 68 percent of total electricity consumption;
 * 38 percent of total carbon dioxide emissions; and
 * 60 percent of total non-industrial waste generation.
 
 In Canada, more than 123,000 new single-family homes were built in 2006. In 
    the United States, an average of 1.24 million single-family homes is built 
    every year. Mexico projects an average of 1M new homes every year for the 
    next 25 years.
 
 Hundreds of coal-fired power plants, a key source of greenhouse gas 
    emissions, are currently on the drawing boards in the United States. 
    According to one report, 76 percent of the energy produced by these plants 
    will go to operate buildings.
 
 According to the report, Canada’s residential building sector is responsible 
    for approximately 80 megatons of CO2 emissions annually and its commercial 
    building sector for approximately 69 megatons of CO2.
 
 In the United States, residential buildings account for approximately 1,210 
    megatons of CO2 per year while commercial buildings are responsible for 
    approximately 1,020 megatons of CO2.
 
 In Mexico, residential buildings account for approximately 42 megatons of 
    CO2 emissions annually, while commercial buildings are responsible for 
    approximately 20 megatons of CO2.
 
 In 2001, the carbon associated with energy services to United States 
    buildings alone constituted 8 percent of total global emissions of CO2, 
    equal to all emissions from Japan and the United Kingdom combined.
 
 Beyond individual buildings, poor patterns of building development often 
    lead to congestion and inefficient use of land, resulting in greater energy 
    consumption and travel time, loss of productivity, polluted runoff to 
    surface water and wastewater treatment systems, loss of agricultural lands, 
    fragmented habitats, and fiscal stress to local communities. Two case 
    studies from Toronto indicate that residents of sprawling neighborhoods tend 
    to emit more greenhouse gases per person and suffer more traffic fatalities.
 
 Buildings contribute significantly to the use of key resources such as 
    energy and water. For instance, in the United States, building operations 
    consume 12 percent of fresh water supplies. In Canada, the building sector 
    consumes half of all natural resources used and generates a quarter of all 
    landfill waste. Worldwide, buildings consume around 40 percent of all raw 
    materials.
 
 Urban water run-off is another important building-related impact. Buildings, 
    and transportation infrastructure that serve them, replace natural surfaces 
    with impermeable materials, typically creating runoff that washes pollutants 
    and sediments into surface water. Urban runoff is the fourth-leading cause 
    of impairment of rivers, third-leading for lakes, and second for estuaries 
    in the United States, and a significant problem in many parts of Mexico and 
    Canada as well. In Mexico City, most rainwater flows on impermeable surfaces 
    to the city drainage system; only a small proportion (11 percent) is 
    recharged into the aquifer, causing a greater dependence on neighboring 
    basins and increasing the risk of flooding.
 
 In the United States, the annual cost of building-related sickness is 
    estimated to be $58B. According to researchers, green building has the 
    potential to generate an additional $200B annually in worker performance in 
    the United States by creating offices with better indoor air.
 
 Studies show that the cost premium to deliver sustainable properties to the 
    market has declined considerably in recent years, and that experienced teams 
    are delivering them at costs competitive with conventional buildings.
 
 Governments at all levels are working to address obstacles to the uptake of 
    green building through the integrated use of building codes; zoning 
    regulations; tax-based incentives; and preferential treatment for green 
    developers (such as fast-track permitting). In addition, green building 
    practices are also being spurred by demand offset programs (in which a 
    developer reduces energy and water demand as a condition of permitting); 
    preferred purchasing; tax shifting; and government-supported research, 
    development, and educational programs.
 
 The US green building industry—almost non-existent a decade ago—is now worth 
    upwards of $12B.
 
 Features of Green Building
 
 Early efforts to bring change to the building sector in the 1960s through 
    the 1980s generally focused on single issues such as energy efficiency and 
    conservation of natural resources. Green building now integrates a wide 
    range of building design, construction, and operation and maintenance 
    practices to provide healthier living and working environments and minimize 
    environmental impacts.
 
 Green building features can include high-tech, modern practices such as (to 
    name only a few) sensor-controlled and compact fluorescent lighting, 
    high-efficiency heat pumps, geothermal heating, photovoltaic cell arrays and 
    solar chimneys, on-site cleaning and reuse of wastewater; as well as simple 
    and often time-tested practices like attention to building orientation and 
    design, increased use of fresh air and natural light, improved insulation, 
    radiant cooling systems that take advantage of naturally occurring 
    conditions, managed forest or salvaged lumber products, recycled concrete 
    aggregates, green roofs, rainwater collection, waterless urinals, facilities 
    for bicyclists, permeable pavers, cork flooring, and use of local products.
 
 The report was produced by the Secretariat of the CEC, prepared under 
    Article 13 of the North American Agreement on Environmental Cooperation (NAAEC) 
    and is not intended to reflect the views of the Parties to that agreement. 
    Information for the report came from background reports prepared by 
    independent experts and from two public meetings. The report and associated 
    background reports, along with a portfolio of selected green buildings in 
    Canada, Mexico and the United States, will be available to the public on 13 
    March 2008, at.
 
 The CEC was established by Canada, Mexico and the United States to build 
    cooperation among the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) partners 
    in implementing NAAEC, the environmental side accord to NAFTA. The CEC 
    addresses environmental issues of continental concern, with particular 
    attention to the environmental challenges and opportunities presented by 
    continent-wide free trade.
 
 SOURCE: Commission for Environmental Cooperation
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