State and Local Energy Policies: Trends in Energy Benchmarking and Disclosure
Approved for 1 AIA LU
Abstract
The trend continues for state and local governments to require commercial building owners to benchmark their buildings using ENERGY STAR’s Portfolio Manager, and to submit the results for public disclosure. These disclosure laws are driving demand for both benchmarking services as well as efficiency projects to help building owners improve upon the performance levels revealed through benchmarking. In some jurisdictions, requirements include regular energy audits or retro-commissioning for buildings that aren’t certified or don’t achieve a certain score. Commissioning and energy services providers can take advantage of this trend by understanding which localities have disclosure ordinances, what the reporting deadlines are, and by offering timely services to support compliance and improvement of scores. This webinar will provide viewers with the resources to identify disclosure laws by location, type and requirements.
Learning Objectives:
- Understanding the trend toward energy transparency through state and local government policies
- Knowing the role of ENERGY STAR’s Portfolio Manager in government policies in order to support compliance
- Identifying ordinances that incorporate requirements for improvements and how those laws are structured
- Understanding the business opportunity that benchmarking laws present for engineering and architecture firms
Sponsored By:
Welcome to Key2Act. We offer leading solutions for the field services and construction space with our industry-leading Signature suite and a unique smart building ecosystem offering integrating building analytics + service workflow automation + energy benchmarking. This unique offering is called BOB – the world’s first Building Optimization Broker. #BOBKnows Energy
Speaker
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Brendan HallProgram Manager, ENERGY STAR
Brendan Hall is a Public Sector Program Manager with the EPA ENERGY STAR Buildings program. He’s been in the role for two years, serving as the higher education lead for the program and one of two staff supporting state and local governments across the country. Before EPA, Brendan worked on energy issues for the city of Ann Arbor in Michigan. He received a Masters of Public Policy and a Masters of Science in Environmental Policy from the University of Michigan.