"We simply must do everything in our power to slow down global
warming before it's too late," said Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger in
September 2006, when he signed Assembly Bill 32, the California
Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006. This landmark legislation,
also known as the California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006,
requires the California Air Resources Board (CARB) to develop
regulations and market mechanisms that will reduce California's
greenhouse gas emissions to 1990 levels by 2020.
Targets as aggressive as a 50% reduction in building energy use
may sound daunting, but information, technologies, and products
crucial to achieving high-performance buildings are available
today.
The Ohlone
College Newark Center for Health Sciences and Technology achieved
LEED Platinum Certification, thanks in part to its energy-efficient
design that provides 52.6% energy savings over Title 24. The
building's energy-saving features include a high-efficiency
geothermal heat pump system, two enthalpy wheels for exhaust heat
recovery, low power density lighting, and occupancy lighting
controls.
Photo courtesy of Perkins+Will
(Architect); Photography by Robert Canfield
In December 2008, CARB submitted its Climate Change Proposed
Scoping Plan, which outlines the State's strategy to achieve the
2020 goals via a "comprehensive set of actions designed to reduce
overall greenhouse gas emissions in California, improve our
environment, reduce our dependence on oil, diversify our energy
sources, save energy, create new jobs, and enhance public
health."
Measures in the Scoping Plan approved by CARB will be further
developed over the next two years and put in place by 2012.
Although AB 32 doesn't target specific energy-using sectors, the
Scoping Plan calls for expanding and strengthening existing
building and appliance standards and states that "Green building
systems have the potential to reduce approximately 26 MMTCO2E
[million metric tons of CO2 equivalent] of greenhouse gas
emissions." Clearly, buildings are a major contributor of
greenhouse gas emissions.
In fact, according to the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE),
buildings in the United States use more energy than any other
sector of the economy. DOE estimates that the nation's 114 million
households and over 4.7 million commercial buildings account for
about 40% of total U.S. energy use, with 22% from residential
buildings and 18% from commercial buildings.
Other estimates place building energy consumption even higher.
According to Architecture 2030, a nonprofit group addressing
climate change solutions in the fields of architecture and
planning, buildings account for as much as 48% of all U.S. energy
consumption. This figure factors in not just the energy required to
operate buildings, but also the embodied energy of building
materials, such as the energy used to extract, transport, and
process the materials used to manufacture concrete, glass, metal,
and carpet.
These days, many forward-looking designers and owners of
commercial buildings across the state are taking a harder look at
their buildings' energy use and related greenhouse gas
emissions-and many are setting extremely ambitious energy
performance targets for their new construction projects.
Targets as aggressive as a 50% reduction in building energy use
may sound daunting, but keep in mind that information,
technologies, and products crucial to achieving high-performance
buildings are available today. In fact, Energy Design Resources'
Design Guides, Design Briefs, and other online resources were
specifically developed to help designers and owners meet ambitious
energy performance targets for new construction. To access these
and many more free resources, visit www.energydesignresources.com.
A number of organizations promote using whole-building targets
as a path to dramatically improving the performance of the nation's
building stock. Here is a rundown of the principal yardsticks for
new commercial buildings in California:
Savings By Design
Sponsored by California's largest utilities under the
auspices of the Public Utilities Commission, Savings By Design
(SBD) offers nonresidential building owners and their design team
incentives and design assistance to meet ambitious energy
efficiency targets.
SBD's Whole Building Approach enables the design team to
consider integrated, optimized energy efficiency solutions. For a
new building to be eligible for incentives, its energy performance
must be at least 10% better than required by Title 24. The better
the performance compared to Title 24, the higher the incentive
rate, up to a maximum of $500,000 for the owner and $50,000 for the
design team. See Table 1.
Table 1. Incentive Rates and Entry Levels

To assist in meeting these energy performance targets, the
program provides access to computer simulation tools and analysis
techniques that can be used to develop the information needed for
cost-effective design decisions. For more information, see: savingsbydesign.com.
The U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency's ENERGY STAR logo is a familiar sight on appliances,
electronics, and commercial buildings. But did you know that
architecture firms can also benefit from the widespread recognition
of ENERGY STAR? Firms that have designed buildings deemed to be
among the nation's best in energy efficiency can now display the
"Designed to Earn the ENERGY STAR" graphic on project drawings.
Receiving the graphic not only affirms your commitment to
energy-efficient designs; it's also how your firm participates in
the ENERGY STAR Challenge and receives recognition from EPA.
To earn this recognition, the
Architect of Record must become an ENERGY STAR partner, which is
easy and no cost. The designer uses EPA's Target Finder, an on-line
tool to determine if estimated energy use for the design project
achieves a rating of 75 or higher, to receive "Designed to Earn the
ENERGY STAR" designation. This rating means that the building is
designed to perform among the top 25% or better of U.S.
buildings.
All projects submitted for the ENERGY
STAR Challenge to EPA by March 6, 2009 will be displayed at the
2009 AIA National Convention in San Francisco.
read more >
While "Designed to Earn the ENERGY STAR" is a good starting
place, EPA encourages architects and their clients to strive for
even higher design targets presented by the 2030 Challenge. This
challenge, issued by Architecture 2030, calls on the architecture
and building community to adopt targets to drastically reduce
building-related greenhouse gas emissions.
For new construction and major renovations, the 2030 Challenge
sets these targets:
- Design all projects to meet a fossil-fuel, GHG-emitting energy
consumption performance standard of 50% of the regional average for
that building type.
- Increase the fossil fuel reduction standard to:
- 60% in 2010
- 70% in 2015
- 80% in 2020
- 90% in 2025
- Carbon neutral by 2030
Architecture 2030 defines carbon-neutral as using no fossilfuel
greenhouse-gas-emitting energy to operate.
Among the many endorsers of the 2030 Challenge are the American
Institute of Architects; the U.S. Conference of Mayors; the EPA,
the U.S. Green Building Council; and the American Society of
Heating, Refrigeration and Air-Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE). For
more information, see www.architecture2030.org.
Over the past decade, the U.S. Green Building Council's
(USGBC's) Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED®)
Green Building Rating Systems have become the most widely accepted
national benchmark for highperformance green buildings. While LEED
has always offered points for energy efficiency in its Optimize
Energy Performance category, the USGBC continues to raise the
target for LEED-certified buildings to achieve better energy
performance and reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
In June 2007, the Council's membership overwhelmingly passed a
vote requiring all LEED certified projects to achieve at least two
Optimize Energy Performance points within LEED. This will require
that all LEED-Certified new construction surpass the ASHRAE 90.1
energy standard by at least 14%. More info can be found at:
www.usgbc.org.
The proposed LEED 2009 will be based upon the more stringent
ASHRAE 2007 energy standard, and thus will further drive down
energy usage in LEED-Certified buildings. In particular, ASHRAE
2007 includes requirements for improved window characteristics.
Not all programs use the same method to quantify energy savings,
so one program's target of 50% savings, for example, may not equal
50% savings using another program's metric. Table 2 summarizes the
baseline standards and metrics that some programs use for energy
performance targets.
Table 2. Baselines and Metrics Used by Programs with Energy
Performance Targets
| Target System |
Baseline Used for Savings Calculation |
Metric for Reporting Savings |
| Savings By Design |
Title 24 compliant building |
Time dependent valuation (TDV) energy |
| Energy Star |
Average building of similar type |
Source energy |
| 2030 Challenge |
Average building of similar type |
Site energy |
| LEED-NC 2.2 |
ASHRAE Standard 90.1 or Title 24 compliant building |
Energy cost |
Adopting an energy performance target is just a starting place.
However, targets don't dictate the most practical or effective
design strategies, but rather provide the design team with a goal
or set of goals to design toward. The higher the target, the more
important it is that it be established and communicated at the very
outset of the planning and design process.
If architects are to meet ambitious energy performance goals,
they need to know those goals very early in the design process when
they are making fundamental decisions about the building's
orientation, massing, layout, materials, and other features.
Engineers and energy consultants need to know performance targets
at the early design stage so that they can create a simulation
model of the building to determine if the design is capable of
meeting its energy performance goals.
In addition to early goal-setting, to achieve a high-performance
building all the major players involved in design and construction
must work closely together from the beginning of the planning phase
all the way through the commissioning phase.
This process, known as integrated building design, requires more
design time and resources than the traditional approach to design.
But it has greater potential to produce buildings that are more
efficient, more comfortable, and more marketable than buildings
that follow the conventional design and construction path. Some
buildings designed following an integrated design approach consume
less than half the energy of conventionally designed buildings. For
more information, download the Energy Design Resources Design
Brief, Integrated
Building Design.
| Training Highlights |
|
California utilities offer outstanding educational opportunities
about the design, construction and operation of energy efficient
buildings. Here are a few of the many upcoming classes and events;
for complete schedules, visit each utility's website.
Introduction to Lighting
A beginning-level lighting class looks at ways to reduce energy
usage and costs through the proper selection of incandescent,
fluorescent, and high-intensity discharge (HID) lighting systems.
Offered February 5, 2009 in Tulare.
read more >
LEED NC v2.2 Exam Preparation Workshop
The USGBC Northern California Chapter, in partnership with
GreenStep, is offering a full-day LEED NC v2.2 Exam Preparation
Workshop. Offered in Sacramento on February 11, 2009.
read
more >
|
2008 Nonresidential Title 24 Standards
A discussion of residential and non-residential building envelope,
lighting and mechanical requirements affecting commercial and high
rise-residential new construction under California's 2008 Title-24
Energy Efficiency Standards (scheduled to take effect in July,
2009).
Offered in San Diego, February 17, 2009.
Offered in Tulare, March 3, 2009.
Comparing Energy Requirements of Green Building Rating
Systems
Learn more about the green building programs including
ENERGY STAR, LEED, and the 2030 Challenge. Offered in
San Diego on February 18, 2009.
read more >
|
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e-News is published by Energy Design
Resources (www.energydesignresources.com),
an online resource center for information on energy efficiency design practices in
California.
Savings By Design (www.savingsbydesign.com)
offers design assistance and incentives to design teams and building owners in California
to encourage high-performance nonresidential building design and construction.
Energy Design Resources and Savings By Design are funded by California utility customers
and administered by Pacific Gas and Electric Company, Sacramento Municipal Utility
District, San Diego Gas and Electric, Southern California Edison and Southern California
Gas Company, under the auspices of the California Public Utilities Commission.