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Wednesday, January 19, 2011

CoStar Study Finds Energy Star, LEED Bldgs. Outperform Peers

CoStar Study Finds Energy Star, LEED Bldgs. Outperform Peers

Demand in Marketplace for Sustainability Creates Higher Occupancy Rates, Stronger Rents and Sale Prices in 'Green' Buildings
March 26, 2008

Description: http://gateway.costar.com/imageviewer/GetImage.aspx?webimage=dreamstime_3021045.jpg
A new study by CoStar Group has found that sustainable "green" buildings outperform their non-green peer assets in key areas such as occupancy, sale price and rental rates, sometimes by wide margins.

The results indicate a broader demand by property investors and tenants for buildings that have earned either LEED® certification or the Energy Star® label and strengthen the "business case" for green buildings, which proponents have increasingly cast as financially sound investments.

According to the CoStar study, LEED buildings command rent premiums of $11.33 per square foot over their non-LEED peers and have 4.1 percent higher occupancy. Rental rates in Energy Star buildings represent a $2.40 per square foot premium over comparable non-Energy Star buildings and have 3.6 percent higher occupancy.

And, in a trend that could signal greater attention from institutional investors, Energy Star buildings are selling for an average of $61 per square foot more than their peers, while LEED buildings command a remarkable $171 more per square foot.

Andrew Florance, president and CEO of CoStar, called the findings a "strong economic case for developing green buildings" at a recent seminar hosted by the District of Columbia Building Industry Association (DCBIA) where he presented results from the CoStar study last month.

"The information we’ve discovered is very compelling. Like all good science, we discovered it by accident," Florance said. "Green buildings are clearly achieving higher rents and higher occupancy, they have lower operating costs, and they’re achieving higher sale prices."

Florance conducted the study with Jay Spivey, CoStar's director of analytics, and Dr. Norm Miller of the Burnham-Moores Center for Real Estate at the University of San Diego. The group analyzed more than 1,300 LEED and Energy Star buildings representing about 351 million square feet in CoStar’s commercial property database of roughly 44 billion square feet, and assessed those buildings against non-green properties with similar size, location, class, tenancy and year-built characteristics to generate the results.

"We wanted to take each and every one of these green buildings in our database and compare them to the buildings they directly compete with in the submarket," Florance said at the seminar.

One factor for the "green" premiums would appear to be the constricted supply of green buildings, which account for just a fraction of the total U.S. building stock (less than 1 percent of space in CoStar's database.) The study indicates that while the number of LEED-certified and Energy Star buildings continues to grow, the supply has not kept pace with demand.

CoStar began tagging green buildings in its database about two years ago with the help of the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC), the nonprofit trade group that created the LEED certification system, and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), which administers the government-sanctioned Energy Star label.

Although often lumped together under the ‘green building’ moniker, LEED and Energy Star address distinct -- if not related -- goals.

LEED, which stands for Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design, indicates a property’s overall sustainability by awarding points for just about any sustainable feature imaginable, from bike racks and rainwater collection and reuse systems, to energy-efficient lighting and low-flow plumbing fixtures. It is comprised of specific programs tailored for new buildings, existing buildings and tenant build-outs, and awards different tiers of certification such as Silver, Gold or Platinum, the highest.

Over the past few years, LEED has emerged as the industry’s de facto sustainable property rating system and become nearly synonymous with the term 'green building'. So much so, "There’s a bit of urgency now that the value of buildings could be affected if they are not LEED-certified," says Mark Bennett, a senior attorney with law firm Miller Canfield who specializes in green building and climate change issues.

Bennett recently chaired the National Green Building Finance and Investment Forum, a conference involving financial sector and property investment leaders held in San Francisco, where he says LEED was a matter of discussion for many of the nation’s top institutional investors. "In large part, they were referring to LEED certification as a component in the definition of a Class A office building," he said. "They basically said, 'If you’re building today without LEED, you’re building in obsolescence.' "

Many would pitch the same argument for EPA's Energy Star program, an energy-benchmarking tool and a flag for the nation’s most energy-efficient properties. The program largely bypasses the bells and whistles of LEED by targeting simpler and highly cost-effective strategies for improving energy efficiency in buildings, such as installing energy efficient windows, turning off computers at night and adding motion sensors to control lighting. The program has worked to great effect: buildings that have earned the Energy Star label use an average of almost 40 percent less energy than average buildings, and emit 35 percent less carbon.

In fact, according to EPA, as many as 500 buildings out of the 4,100 or so total commercial buildings that have earned Energy Star use a full 50 percent less energy than average buildings. And many of those efficiency practices, such as upgrading light bulbs or office equipment, pay for themselves in energy cost savings.

On top of that, premiums that the market is willing to pay for Energy Star buildings, as indicated in the CoStar study, are a clear demonstration of the overall impact of energy efficiency on property value, says Stuart Brodsky, national program manager for the Commercial Properties division of Energy Star.

"The business case for energy efficiency is indisputable," Brodsky told CoStar. "The business case is so strong that the financial results can be applied to asset value, through increased NOI [net operating income], or leveraged to pursue other aspects of green buildings that do not show as strong of a financial rate of return."

But the benefit of Energy Star extends beyond asset value. Aside from the actual Energy Star designation, which owners may choose to pursue by demonstrating energy reductions, the program also serves as a stand-alone energy benchmarking tool: an energy report card, so to speak, and the type of environmental transparency in the industry Florance has routinely called for.

"For a lot of people, it's where the rubber meets the road," Brodsky says of the benchmarking aspect, which saw participation jump by more than 175 percent from 2006 to 2007. To date, almost 8 billion square feet of U.S. property has been benchmarked through Energy Star.

One sharp contrast between Energy Star and LEED is where the responsibility for implementation falls. With LEED, where three-fourths of all certified projects to date fall under the program's flagship brand -- LEED for New Construction (LEED-NC) -- the burden for certification is largely on architects and engineers at the design stage.

But with Energy Star, which looks exclusively at energy consumption in existing assets, responsibility shifts to property managers. Demand for Energy Star buildings is a "quantifiable indicator of superior management practices across the property, which may otherwise be intangible," Brodsky says.

Other contrasts are closer to the surface. Energy Star is often seen as just one piece of the sustainability puzzle, while LEED buildings, especially those certified under LEED-NC, don't always correlate to high levels of energy efficiency (USGBC has, perhaps in response, re-tooled its building operations platform, LEED for Existing Buildings (LEED-EB)).

But in many ways, those differences have benefited both programs, allowing them to serve the same customers without becoming direct competitors. Several big commercial real estate service providers, including CB Richard Ellis and Transwestern, run Energy Star and LEED programs concurrently across their managed portfolios.

So does Kennedy Associates Real Estate Counsel LP, an Energy Star partner since 2005 and one of only a handful of U.S. institutional investment advisors recognized as an early adopter of green strategies.

"We think of Energy Star and LEED in concert with each other," says Bob Ratliffe, an executive vice president of portfolio management with the Seattle-based firm, which also has broad development operations. "LEED and Energy Star come up in every investment we make, they come up in the investment committee, they come up in asset management committee meetings. Both are part of our fabric."

Under its Responsible Property Investing (RPI) platform, which promotes energy conservation, sustainable development and responsible contracting across its portfolio of more than $9 billion in assets under management, Kennedy's LEED and Energy Star activities are extensive. It has about $325 million in LEED-certified assets, as well as another pool of buildings valued at around $1.5 billion that are either pre-certified for LEED or planned for certification. In addition, the firm recently identified more than 45 office buildings for enrollment in the LEED-EB portfolio pilot program.

Its portfolio also includes 35 Energy Star-labeled buildings, a number that includes more than 60 percent of all Energy Star-labeled warehouse facilities to date. The firm's benchmarking efforts currently include more than 160 buildings totaling 22 million square feet of office and industrial space.

Kennedy says it sees higher occupancy and rent rates, as well as quicker lease-up and better tenant retention, in its LEED and Energy Star buildings due to a number of factors, including market demand. "If we lease buildings faster and hang on to tenants longer, that adds to the economic equation," says Preston Sargent, an executive vice president and principal with Kennedy who oversees the firm's largest client, the Multi-Employer Property Trust (MEPT).

"And obviously, if you're selling a building at a lower cap rate, that's additional icing on the cake," he said.

But the benefits extend beyond that, Ratliffe says. "Our investors recognize we are a national leader in [sustainability] and put a value on that. And as they assess their advisors, they see the leadership we're taking in RPI and give us points, if you will, as they assess us amongst our competitors. And that's good for business," he said.

In large part, Kennedy is able to balance Energy Star and LEED because the programs fit well with each other. "They're complementary," says Christian Gunter, a LEED-Accredited Professional and assistant vice president of Kennedy's RPI program, who points out that LEED-EB buildings must achieve a certain Energy Star score as a prerequisite for certification.

"In a recessionary environment there's more than one way to cut costs," Ratliffe says, referring to the energy and operational efficiencies emphasized under Energy Star and LEED-EB. "It's not just cutting employees."

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

ederal agencies are required to lease space in buildings that have earned EPA’s ENERGY STAR

All Federal Agencies Now Required to Lease Space in ENERGY STAR Labeled Buildings Back To Buildings & Plants News Room  As of December 19, 2010, Federal agencies are now required to lease space in buildings that have earned EPA’s ENERGY STAR in the most recent year.  This provides an opportunity for owners and operators of ENERGY STAR labeled buildings to attract and retain Federal tenants, and allows Federal agencies to help move the market for energy efficient buildings.     Who is affected?     1. All Federal agencies entering into a new lease for more than 10,000 square feet.    2. Owners and managers of commercial real estate (lessors) with existing Federal leases for more than 10,000 square feet.    3. Owners and managers of commercial buildings (lessors) interested in attracting Federal tenants.  What are the rules?  According to Section 435 of the Energy Independence and Security Act (EISA) 2007:     1. Federal agencies are required to lease space in buildings that have earned EPA’s ENERGY STAR.    2. The rule applies to any new leases entered into on or after December 19, 2010.    3. The lessor’s building must have earned EPA’s ENERGY STAR on a date not more than 12 months prior to the lease award date.    4. In instances where a lessor’s building is not eligible to earn EPA’s ENERGY STAR, Federal lessees will require the lessor to implement certain cost-effective energy efficiency upgrades to the building.  Why is this important?      * The Federal Government occupies nearly 500,000 buildings across the nation. By raising the bar on the energy performance of those buildings, the Federal Government is leading the way towards a more sustainable, energy-secure future for America.     * To earn EPA’s ENERGY STAR, buildings must perform better than 75% of their peers. These top-performing buildings use, on average, 35% less energy than average buildings—saving money and preventing greenhouse gas emissions without sacrificing comfort or quality.     * ENERGY STAR labeled buildings are verified by independent licensed professionals, ensuring that Federal agencies are only leasing the most energy-efficient properties on the market.

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TOP 50 REC Purchasers (Voluntary)

National Top 50


 
Combined, these top 50 largest purchases amount to nearly 12.6 billion kilowatt-hours annually, which represents nearly 70 percent of the green power commitments made by all EPA Green Power Partners.
As of October 5, 2010
National Top 50 icon.The Green Power Partnership works with a wide variety of leading organizations — from Fortune 500 companies to local, state and federal governments, and a growing number of colleges and universities. The following Top Partner Rankings highlight the annual green power purchases of leading organizations within the United States and across individual industry sectors.
These green power purchases help reduce the environmental impacts of electricity use and support the development of new renewable generation capacity nationwide. Purchase amounts reflect U.S. operations only and are sourced from U.S.-based green power resources. Organizations can meet EPA purchase requirements using any combination of three different product options (1) Renewable Energy Certificates, (2) On-site generation, and (3) Utility green power products.
Purchase figures are based on annualized Partner contract amounts (kilowatt-hours), not calendar year totals. These rankings are updated on a quarterly schedule. Find out how your organization can partner with EPA today! To view a top partner list, select from the chart below:

Annual Green Power Usage (kWh) GP % of Total Electricity Use* Organization Type Providers (listed in descending order by kWh supplied to Partner) Green Power Resources
1. Intel Corporation
1,433,200,000 51% Information Technology Sterling Planet°, On-site Generation, PNM Biogas, Biomass, Geothermal, Small-hydro, Solar, Wind
2. Kohl's Department Stores
1,367,376,000 100% Retail 3Degrees°, WM Renewable Energy°, On-site Generation, Sacramento Municipal Utility District°, City of Dover Biogas, Biomass, Small-hydro, Solar, Wind
3. Whole Foods Market
817,657,623 100% Retail 3Degrees°, Austin Energy, On-site Generation Solar, Wind
4. Starbucks
573,432,000 55% Restaurants & Food Srvcs. Nexant°, 3Degrees° Wind
5. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
500,000,000 50% Govt. (State) Renewable Choice Energy° Various
6. City of Houston, TX
438,000,000 34% Govt. (Local, Municipal) Reliant Energy Wind
7. Dell Inc.
431,058,000 129% Information Technology NextEra Energy Resources°, TXU Energy°, Austin Energy, Oklahoma Gas & Electric, Idaho Power°, On-site Generation Biogas, Solar, Wind
8. Johnson & Johnson
416,510,688 39% Health Care 3Degrees°, NextEra Energy Resources°, GDF Suez Energy Resources NA°, Sempra Energy°, Liberty Power°, On-site Generation, PNM Biomass, Solar, Wind
9. U.S. Air Force
339,660,392 4% Govt. (Federal) TransAlta Energy Marketing, Sterling Planet°, On-site Generation, Oklahoma Gas & Electric, Colorado Springs Utilities, Rocky Mountain Power°, Champion Energy Services, Georgia Power°, Nexant, Xcel Energy°, PowerSouth Energy Cooperative, Hess Energy Marketing°, Minnkota Power Cooperative, Western Farmers Electric Cooperative, El Paso Electric, Rocky Mountain Generation Cooperative Biogas, Biomass, Solar, Wind
10. City of Dallas, TX
333,659,840 40% Govt. (Local, Municipal) GDF Suez Energy Resources NA Wind
11. HSBC North America
300,000,000 112% Banking & Fin. Srvcs. NextEra Energy Resources° Wind
12. Cisco Systems, Inc.
270,209,528 29% Information Technology Sterling Planet°, Austin Energy, AmerenUE° Biomass, Wind
13. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. / California and Texas Facilities
263,533,433 8% Retail Duke Energy, On-site Generation Biogas, Solar, Wind
14. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
262,100,000 100% Govt. (Federal) 3Degrees°, NextEra Energy Resources, Bonneville Environmental Foundation°, Pacific Power°, On-site Generation, Minnesota Power Biogas, Biomass, Solar, Wind
15. District of Columbia
244,267,000 50% Govt. (Local, Municipal) Washington Gas Energy Services° Wind
16. TD Bank, N.A.
240,333,272 100% Banking & Fin. Srvcs. Community Energy°, Renewable Choice Energy° Wind
17. BNY Mellon
229,500,000 77% Banking & Fin. Srvcs. NextEra Energy Resources°, Pepco Energy Services° Wind
18. City of Chicago, IL
215,000,000 20% Govt. (Local, Municipal) Renewable Choice Energy° Wind
19. University of Pennsylvania
201,841,600 48% Education (Higher) Community Energy°, On-site Generation Solar, Wind
20. BD
200,631,536 38% Health Care NextEra Energy Resources°, Rocky Mountain Power° Wind
21. U.S. Department of Energy
188,599,600 4% Govt. (Federal) Various Various
22. Kimberly-Clark Corporation
176,533,000 7% Consumer Products On-site Generation Biomass
23. State of Illinois
176,000,000 33% Govt. (State) Integrys Energy°, City Water, Light & Power° Wind
24. Wells Fargo & Company
175,000,000 14% Banking & Fin. Srvcs. 3Degrees° Wind
25. Deutsche Bank
160,000,000 103% Banking & Fin. Srvcs. Element Markets° Wind
26. Pearson, Inc.
157,096,000 101% Consulting Srvcs. Sterling Planet°, Austin Energy Biogas, Wind
27. U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs
150,000,000 5% Govt. (Federal) WindCurrent Wind
28. Staples
146,625,408 22% Retail Sterling Planet°, Avista Utilities, Pacific Power°, Tennessee Valley Authority°, Portland General Electric, Constellation NewEnergy° Biogas, Solar, Wind
29. Bloomberg LP
140,401,150 59% Media & Publishing Hess Energy Marketing°, Constellation NewEnergy°, ConEdison Solutions°, BlueStar Energy° Biomass, Wind
30. Montgomery County Clean Energy Buyers Group
134,599,000 25% Govt. (Local, Municipal) Renewable Choice Energy° Wind
31. Motorola, Inc.
119,000,000 32% Telecommunications Native Energy° Wind
32. Mohawk Fine Papers Inc.
116,250,000 113% Ag. & Nat. Resources 3Degrees°, Sterling Planet°, NextEra Energy Resources°, Community Energy° Wind
33. The World Bank Group
115,325,000 100% Non-Profit (NGO) WindCurrent° Wind
34. Lowe's
110,950,000 2% Retail Nexant°, On-site Generation Biomass, Solar
35. Chicago Public Schools
107,709,620 20% Education (K-12) Element Markets°, On-site Generation Solar
36. State of Connecticut
107,216,096 17% Govt. (State) Hess Energy Marketing°, Direct Energy° Various
37. Hilton Worldwide
102,000,000 29% Travel & Leisure Renewable Choice Energy° Wind
38. The Dannon Company, Inc.
100,000,000 100% Food & Beverage Native Energy° Wind
39. Lockheed Martin Corporation
98,063,334 5% Industrial Goods & Srvcs. Sterling Planet°, Hess Energy Marketing°, TXU Energy°, 3 Phases Renewables°, Xcel Energy° Solar, Wind
40. Safeway Inc.
97,390,000 3% Retail 3Degrees°, On-site Generation Solar, Wind
41. State of Wisconsin
92,400,000 10% Govt. (State) Madison Gas & Electric, Wisconsin Public Power Inc., We Energies° Biogas, Solar, Wind
42. Harris Bank
91,400,000 100% Banking & Fin. Srvcs. NextEra Energy Resources° Wind
43. Sprint Nextel
87,600,000 3% Telecommunications Kansas City Power & Light° Wind
44. Carnegie Mellon University
86,840,000 75% Education (Higher) Community Energy°, On-site Generation Solar, Wind
45. ING
86,322,000 100% Banking & Fin. Srvcs. NextEra Energy Resources° Wind
46. Pennsylvania State University
83,600,000 20% Education (Higher) 3Degrees°, Sterling Planet, Community Energy° Biomass, Small-hydro, Wind
47. Sony DADC
82,000,000 46% Information Technology Horizon Wind Energy° Wind
48. Port of Portland
75,030,000 106% Transport & Shipping NextEra Energy Resources°, On-site Generation Solar, Wind
49. City of Austin, TX
74,142,994 17% Govt. (Local, Municipal) Austin Energy Biogas, Wind
50. U.S. General Services Administration / Region 2
73,791,259 43% Govt. (Federal) Just Energy, Hess Energy Marketing, Pepco Energy Services Biogas, Wind
*Reflects the amount of green power as a percentage of total purchased electricity use. Partners choosing to purchase green power in an amount exceeding 100 percent of their U.S. organization-wide electricity use are listed as such.
°Indicates Provider is selling Partner a third-party certified green power product. For more information on third-party certification, visit http://www.epa.gov/greenpower/buygp/certified.htm.
Current and past Top Partners lists are available here for you to view and print:
October 2010 list (PDF) (4 pp., 220K, About PDF)
July 2010 list (PDF) (4 pp., 246K)
April 2010 list (PDF) (4 pp., 246K)
January 2010 list (PDF) (4 pp., 246K)
2009 lists (PDF) (16 pp, 1.2M)
2008 lists (PDF) (10 pp, 209K)
2007 lists (PDF) (12 pp, 397K)
2006 lists (PDF) (10 pp, 511K)
2005 lists (PDF) (8 pp, 226K)
2004 list (PDF) (2 pp, 151K)
For additional information on how your organization can join these Top Partners as Green Power Partners, please visit the Join Us page of this Web site.