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Edward Mazria Receives Hanley Award

Architect and champion of building energy efficiency Edward Mazria was named this year’s winner of The Hanley Award for Vision and Leadership in Sustainable Housing. Mazria was selected from among 18 distinguished nominees by a panel of judges that comprised Michael J. Hanley, president of The Hanley Foundation; Frank Anton, CEO of Hanley Wood; Steven Winter, FAIA, president of Steven Winter Associates; Allison Ewing, AIA, principal of Hays + Ewing Design Studio; and Sarah Susanka, FAIA, principal of Susanka Studios.

Building Sector Leaders Call for Steep Energy and Emissions Cuts

SANTA FE, NM – Twenty-four of the largest and most influential architecture, engineering, and development firms based in the U.S., which are responsible for a combined $100 billion in building construction annually, have joined forces with Architecture 2030, a leading non-profit research organization, to call on Congress to update national building code standards to meet steep and achievable energy reduction targets.

Specifically, this group is pressing the Senate to pass the building energy reduction targets in Section 241 of the American Clean Energy Leadership Act of 2009 (S. 1462) and incorporate timelines to reach carbon-neutral buildings by 2030.

Firm leaders point out that buildings and their energy use account for approximately half of the energy and greenhouse gas emissions and 75 percent of electricity consumption in the United States, and that if the U.S. is to have any hope of getting its energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions under control, it must begin seriously addressing its Building Sector.

According to these firms, including HKS ArchitectsPerkins+WillARUP, and HOK the building energy code targets in Section 241 are both readily achievable and cost effective, and passage will give the architecture, engineering, and building community the support they need to begin transforming the built environment. “We – the Building Sector community – are on the front lines on this one. We have a big job ahead of us and we need Congress to begin putting into place the code regulations and support necessary to help us get the job done,” said Ralph Hawkins, Chairman and CEO of HKS Architects.

These firms are speaking from experience. They are all adopters and implementers of the 2030 Challenge, which was issued to the architecture and planning community by Architecture 2030 in January 2006.

The energy reduction targets of the widely adopted 2030 Challenge are the basis for the targets in the Senate bill and the targets and timelines of the Waxman-Markey bill passed in the House (HR 2454, Section 201). The Challenge calls for a 50% energy reduction in all new and renovated buildings today, incrementally increasing to carbon-neutral in 2030. The Challenge enjoys widespread national bi-partisan support and has been adopted by the American Institute of Architects, U.S. Conference of Mayors, National Association of Counties, National Governors Association, and numerous professional and industry organizations, design firms, and cities, counties, and states.

These 24 firms are part of a powerful and burgeoning movement within the business community to push hard for changes that address energy consumption and climate change while opening new markets. On September 22, 2009, five hundred corporate executives from firms in about 50 countries issued the “Copenhagen Communique”, calling for climate negotiators to finalize a new international climate treaty by the end of the year.

According to Edward Mazria, Executive Director of Architecture 2030, “in order for the U.S. to take an effective leadership role on energy and climate change, we must address our Building Sector, and Senate building energy code legislation coupled with the 2030 Challenge timelines, will make that possible.”

###

For a .pdf version of this press release, click here.
For an online version, click here.
For a complete list of supporting firms, click here.
Download letters to the U.S. Senate here.

Historic House Vote: Waxman-Markey Bill Includes 2030 Challenge Targets

U.S. House of RepresentativesAn outcome of Architecture 2030’s ongoing efforts to educate Congressional members on the positive impacts of updating the National Model Building Energy Code Standards to meet the 2030 Challenge targets, the U.S. House of Representatives Energy and Commerce Committee has incorporated updating the national code standards to meet these targets into the code provisions of the Waxman-Markey Bill, titled the “American Clean Energy and Security Act of 2009” (Section 201 of H.R. 2454).

These provisions would, among other benefits, continue code updates to the year 2030, meeting the full extent of the 2030 targets. It is anticipated that the full House will vote on this historic bill as early as tomorrow, Friday, June 26th.

We want to thank the many groups and firms that support Architecture 2030’s initiatives and the code provisions in the Bill. We specifically want to thank the Alliance to Save Energy and Environment America for their tireless efforts on the Hill.

“Conversations That Will Change the World” DC Speakers Series Presents Ed Mazria and John Podesta

On February 18, Edward Mazria appeared at the National Building Museum in DC with John Podesta who, as a key advisor to President Obama and President of the Center for American Progress, is another of today’s most influential minds. A video of the event, presented as part of the museum’s ongoing For the Greener Good lecture series, can now be seen online, with an interactive forum for posing questions to the speakers.

Watch the event online, then join the discussion to ask Edward Mazria and John Podesta your questions on the Q&A Forum (closes April 10). For Edward Mazria’s talk, cue video to 12:35.

Senate Committee Calls on Edward Mazria to Testify on Building Energy Efficiency

On February 26, 2009 Edward Mazria was called before the United States Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources to give expert testimony on reducing energy consumption in buildings.

Following his appearance at the full committee hearing, Mr. Mazria responded to a list of questions for the record from U.S. Senators Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) and Maria Cantwell (D-WA). Mazria’s responses to these questions, with additional written testimony evaluating the NAIOP study, “Achieving 30% and 50% over ASHRAE 90.1-2004 in a Low-Rise Office Building”, are provided below.

To download the Companion Guide, with illustrations referred to in Mr. Mazria’s testimony, click here.

For the addendum graph with historic and projected U.S. CO2 emissions by sector, click here.

JUMP TO:

Questions from U.S. Senator Lisa Murkowski (R-AK)

1. Market Forces and Energy Efficiency
2. Government vs. Non-Government Efficiency Programs
3. Applying Stimulus Funds to Energy Reductions
4. Delays in Goverment Funding Distribution
5. Success of the 2030 Challenge
6. Management and Oversight of The Two-Year, Nine-Million-Jobs Investment Plan
7. Other Green Mortgage Products
8. Obstacles to Achieving Zero Net Energy Performance

Questions from U.S. Senator Maria Cantwell (D-WA)

1. Addressing Green Roof and Cool Roof Strategies
2. Energy Savings Potential of Green Roofs
3. Green Roof Deployment in the Federal Building Sector

Additional Testimony:

Evaluation of NAIOP Study, “Achieving 30% and 50% over ASHRAE 90.1-2004
in a Low-Rise Office Building”

 

Questions from U.S. Senator Lisa Murkowski (R-AK)

1. What are some examples where the market has moved energy efficiency in the right direction regardless of government mandates?

Unfortunately, without government mandates, the market moves the Building Sector towards increased energy efficiency slowly, escalating development only when the country enters a recession and/or the price of energy increases dramatically. This can be seen clearly in the graph on Page #2 of my testimony. The drop in Building Sector energy consumption is most apparent with the spike in oil prices that began with the 1973 Arab oil embargo and continued through the short recession that followed, and during the early 1980’s recession when oil reached the equivalent of $103.76 barrel (today’s dollars) following the 1979 Iranian Revolution.After the crisis ended, lighting and energy management technologies that were initiated during this period continued to develop, albeit slowly, due in part to state initiatives and mandates. For example, lighting technology continued to improve with the introduction of higher efficiency lamps (T-8, T-5, and compact fluorescent bulbs) and electronic ballasts. Several states (California, for example) adopted stricter energy codes for commercial buildings that were partly responsible for the development of markets for these more-efficient lighting products. Over time, these advances in energy-efficient technology were adopted more widely by the Building Sector. But government programs were instrumental in promoting the early use of these advances and creating markets so the costs for these products could be reduced.

2. The federal and state governments have been engaged in several standardized programs to promote energy efficiency in the last few decades. It is also true that there have been advances in energy efficient technology without the government playing a role. Please describe the pros and cons of these two approaches.

Relatively little has been accomplished in building sector energy efficiency over the past few decades, so it is difficult to single out the pros and cons of each approach. The two approaches seem to only work well when they work in tandem. For example, when fossil fuel prices increase dramatically, business and industry look to innovate and deliver alternatives to the marketplace, while governments deliver market incentives, new building codes, and fund R&D and technology transfer through universities, research institutions and national laboratories.This was evident during the energy crisis of the 1970’s and early 1980’s. At that time, there were major advances in Building Sector technologies – in glazing materials (heat mirror and low-e coatings), passive and active solar energy systems design and applications, passive and active cooling applications, natural ventilation systems, phase-change materials, moveable insulation, building simulation modeling programs, daylighting systems and controls, energy management systems, night set-back thermostats and occupancy sensors, solar hot water heating, solar thermal electric generation and storage, photovoltaics and advances in low-energy lighting systems, to name just a few. While some of these technologies continued to advance slowly over the past twenty-four years, relatively little has happened in developing innovative new energy efficiency and building energy technologies and systems. The energy intensity of commercial buildings has changed little over this period (total energy use per square foot increased), while a decrease in the energy intensity of housing was offset by an increase in housing size.

Government programs also play a critical role in advancing building sector technologies due to the relationship between construction costs and energy costs. For many commercial or leased building projects, capital costs for construction and operating costs for energy use are budgeted and paid for from different accounts. The project owner pays for the building design and construction, while the tenants pay for the resulting operating costs for energy and resource use. In this fiscal environment, government programs (state energy codes and tax credits, for example) have been very important in advancing the adoption and promoting the improvement of cost-effective, energy-efficient technologies.

The situation we find ourselves in today, with three major crises converging at the same time – foreign energy dependence, climate change and a deep economic recession – is very different from anything we have ever experienced before. I believe both approaches to the Building Sector, which is at the center of all three crises, must play a critical role if we are to successfully meet these challenges.


3. The recent stimulus bill directs billions to energy efficiency measures. How can these funds be targeted to be most effective?

I have carefully read through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act 2009, specifically to analyze the bill’s requirements on energy efficiency. I find that only in some cases are there requirements, and that the few programs with requirements are somewhat vague. There are no benchmarks or energy reduction targets (which are essential to attaining real and significant reductions) mentioned in the bill.What this means is that many of the building projects put forward in response to the bill will have minimal energy reduction strategies, and as a result, minimal energy reductions.

The following language, if included in the energy bill, would help to prioritize projects and serve as a guideline for projects submitted for grants. While the language does not prohibit any projects from going forward, it makes clear that projects will be competing for funds and meeting specific energy reduction targets will be a priority consideration in the judgment criteria.

This language also sets the benchmark based on i) CBECS and RECS for federal and federally-owned buildings as called for in the Energy Independence and Security Act 2007, and ii) ASHRAE and IECC for other buildings. In addition, it also allows the Secretary of Energy to set other benchmarks and reduction targets, since there are states that have their own codes with specific criteria.

The following language would send a strong message to the building community that significant energy reductions are important, and that the federal government will lead the way:

A. That any new and renovated federal buildings receiving stimulus money be required to meet the 2010 energy reduction standard set by the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007. Funding preference will be given to projects that achieve overall energy savings compared to the Commercial Building Energy Consumption Survey 2003 for commercial buildings and Residential Energy Consumption Survey 2005 (RECS) for residential buildings (or other comparable codes, standards or measurement protocols authorized by the Secretary of Energy) of, in the following order of priority—(1) carbon neutral, (2) 85 percent, (3) 70 percent, (4) 55 percent.B. For any new building construction or renovation project grants made with stimulus money by state and local governments, preference shall be given to projects that achieve overall energy savings compared to ASHRAE 90.1-2004 for commercial buildings and IECC 2006 for residential buildings (or other comparable codes, standards or measurement protocols authorized by the Secretary of Energy) of, in the following order of priority—(1) 75 percent to carbon neutral, (2) 50 percent, (3) 30 percent.


4. Also, as you know, $3.1 billion of energy efficiency block grants came with preconditions, namely energy efficiency rulemaking measures and updating building codes. Are you concerned with the inevitable delay in getting the energy efficiency funding out to states and localities?

The answer to this question is multifaceted and requires some explanation.Since professional architects and engineers design most commercial and public buildings and large-scale housing developments, it is instructive to look at A/E firm billings to project future Building Sector construction activity. It takes 6 months to a year or two to design and prepare construction documents for a building project, a few months for bidding, a month or two for contract negotiations and another month or two for construction start up. Billings for housing began to decline sharply at the end of 2007, followed by a decline in commercial and industrial project billings in early 2008. It was not until August of 2008 that we began to see a decline in public building project billings. At the end of 2008, while construction in housing and commercial buildings were in steep decline, construction in the public sector was steady with school construction up 6% and government building construction up 6% (Page 14 of my testimony).

Most of the stimulus money and energy efficiency block grants for buildings are slated for the public building sector. Projects that have been designed but shelved for lack of tax dollars will be pulled off the shelf as shovel ready. Other projects will begin the design process taking advantage of efficiency block grant monies. As a result, the public building sector should continue on without a construction downturn for another few years.

While I do not foresee a delay in using the efficiency block grant money, the anticipated building energy consumption reductions will fall short unless the actions recommended in answer #3 above are implemented.


5. In the 2007 Energy Independence and Security Act, Congress authorized an initiative for the development and establishment of zero net energy commercial buildings which applies to any commercial building newly constructed in the United States by 2030 as well as 50% of the commercial building stock of the United states by 2040. Groups such as the American Institute of Architects (AIA) have endorsed an immediate 50% reduction in fossil fuel-generated energy and a 10% reduction target every five years until new and renovated buildings achieve carbon neutrality in 2030.

Have we made any progress on these initiatives?

Yes, interest in the 2030 Challenge energy reduction targets has increased significantly since we issued the 2030 Challenge in January of 2006. Many state and local governments, professional organizations, A/E firms and institutions have adopted the targets and have begun to implement them, and many more would like to do so. However, without clear and sustained leadership and support from the federal government, these efforts will not be enough. Specifically, we will not see any significant reductions in the rate of increase in building sector energy consumption, let alone a decline, until the National Model Building Energy Code Standards are updated as indicated on Pages 12 and 13 of my testimony.My emphasis on performance standards is deliberate. By setting performance rather than prescriptive standards, Congress will not be picking energy and efficiency technology winners and losers. The marketplace, individual practitioners and building owners will determine the most cost-effective strategies that meet the performance standards. Many new strategies and technologies will emerge (and existing ones will re-emerge) to meet the particular conditions of various climatic regions and economic conditions. Performance standards bring out the best in our competitive and entrepreneurial spirit and create a level playing field for all technologies.

For this approach to be most effective, performance standards and ‘reach codes’ must preempt federal minimum appliance standards to insure the emergence of new technologies, systems and design practices.

Also, I would ask that the Committee be mindful of the dates for the Model Energy Code updates specified on Page 12 of my testimony. The dates correspond with the 2007 Energy Independence and Security Act’s initiative for the development and establishment of zero net energy commercial buildings in the United States by 2030 as well as 50% of the commercial building stock of the United States by 2040. They also coincide with the code standard update cycles set by IECC and ASHRAE. For example, the 2016 date for the 50% standard is critical and is set to coincide with the 2018 IECC code release date of April 2017. The next IECC code cycle is not until 2024. The dates specified on Page 12 – 2016, 2022 and 2028, giving the states two years to adopt the code standards – meets both the 2030 Congressional target date and code cycle upgrade timelines.


6. As part of your vision to stimulate the economy, you provide a plan that would adjust interest rates on homes, pursuant to their energy reduction capability, and an accelerated depreciation schedule for commercial buildings, who demonstrate energy savings. Please describe who would manage these mortgage and depreciation programs.

The Plan would leverage the benefits of energy reductions by offering for both existing and new homes, through Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, mortgage financing with reduced interest rates in proportion to the energy reduction target reached. The Treasury Department is currently doubling its financial support to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. It will buy as much as $200 billion of preferred stock in the two mortgage companies, twice as much as previously promised. This support provides the capital to implement the Plan and tie the Treasury’s support of Fannie and Freddie to private investment and job creation.The new ‘conforming’ mortgages would be no larger then that allowed by law. The interest rate buy-down schedule would be determined by available funds and the level of job creation desired. For existing homes, a minimum amount of private investment in efficiency would be required according to the energy reduction target and mortgage rate offered. Homeowners taking advantage of the Plan would be required to have an energy audit and a certification that the work was performed properly. Equity can be built into the Plan by allowing existing efficiency and solar tax credits to be used up to a maximum mortgage amount or home value. Tying the mortgage rate buy down to minimum energy reduction targets insures that every federal dollar spent will stimulate private investment and create jobs.

Since my testimony, the U.S. Treasury and the Federal Reserve are expected to offer refinancing through the Term Asset-backed Loan Facility (TALF) next month to help free up money for the commercial real estate sector. Given this new development, the way to create jobs through commercial building energy reductions is through existing federal, state and local programs. At the federal level we recommend increasing The Energy Efficient Commercial Buildings Deduction from $1.80 per square foot for the 50% energy consumption reduction (cost savings) to 1) $3.50 per square foot for meeting a minimum 50% energy consumption reduction target below ASHRAE 90.1-2004, 2) $5.00 per square foot for meeting a minimum 75% energy consumption reduction target, and 3) $6.50 per square foot for a building that is carbon neutral.

Building energy consumption from non-depletable energy sources collected on site or provided from within a development would be considered an energy reduction. The tax deduction should be offered for a period of 3 years.


7. I understand that there have been several green mortgage products developed to assist homeowners interested in these types of improvements. How different would your program be from these types of products?

Interest in ‘green’ homes has increased dramatically in the past few years. There are rebates, tax breaks and cash incentives for green homes offered by states and local governments. Fannie Mae provides a ‘green mortgage’ program where the added value of a home’s energy efficiency translates into more buying power not necessarily a lower net monthly outlay. The program is for both new construction and existing properties.The problem is very few people are applying for these incentives and mortgages. Right now, the public is averse to purchasing big-ticket items and increasing their monthly outlay, regardless of how small.

Our Plan is very different. By tying the mortgage interest-rate buy-down proposed in our Plan to specific energy reduction targets and homeowner investments, three highly beneficial and desired results are achieved: 1) new demand for Building Sector jobs is immediately generated, benefiting not only the Building Sector, but all the industries and sectors that support the Building Sector, 2) a homeowner’s monthly mortgage payments and energy bills are significantly reduced, providing disposable income and making it much more likely that they can meet their payments, and 3) creation of a new $236 billion per year renovation market that does not currently exist. A mortgage buy-down that is not tied to aggressive energy reduction targets and private investment will not create many jobs or new business opportunities.


8. Is it reasonable to demand Net Zero Energy performance from existing buildings, regardless of size, and geographic location? What obstacles exist in practice, to obtain net zero energy?

In the 2007 Energy Independence and Security Act, Congress authorized an initiative for the establishment of 50% of the commercial building stock of the United States to be zero net energy by 2040. In the Act, the definition of a ‘zero-net-energy commercial building’ is:
“a commercial building that is designed, constructed, and operated to—
(A) require a greatly reduced quantity of energy to operate; (B) meet the balance of energy needs from sources of energy that do not produce greenhouse gases (GHG); (C) therefore result in no net emissions of greenhouse gases; and (D) be economically viable.”
Given this definition, I believe it is possible to achieve zero-net-energy for 50% of the commercial building stock of the United States by 2040 for the following reasons; i) over the next 30 years three quarters of the built environment in the U.S. will be either new or renovated; ii) low-rise commercial buildings, which are easier to renovate to zero-net-energy, make up 77% of total U.S. commercial building stock; iii) most existing buildings can reduce their energy consumption using economically viable and readily available, strategies, technologies and equipment; and iv) the definition allows for existing buildings that cannot produce as much clean (non-GHG emitting) energy on-site as they consume, to purchase clean energy from a local or central utility.

Questions from U.S. Senator Maria Cantwell (D-WA)

I believe another promising area for improving the efficiency and many other aspects of our nation’s buildings is adding on green roofs. On efficiency benefits in particular, according to the EPA, the surface temperature of a green roof can be as much as 90 degrees Fahrenheit cooler than the surface of a traditional rooftop.

1. Since your testimony did not specifically address green roofs, could you talk about what potential roles do you see for green roofs in achieving higher levels of building energy efficiency?

Green roofs and cool roofs (solar reflective roofing membrane or surface) are part of a new generation of roofing strategies that have a high potential to reduce energy consumption in buildings. Each has advantages and disadvantages that are well documented in government literature. It must be noted however, that green roofs provide benefits beyond energy savings, such as storm-water management, filtering and reducing the temperature of water runoff, cooling ambient air temperatures (heat island effect), and increasing green space (see: “Reducing Urban Heat Islands: Compendium of Strategies”, EPA 2008).


2. What is the energy savings potential of green roofs and what federal incentives and programs might help to accelerate the deployment of green roofs nationwide?

The energy savings potential of green roofs depends on local climatic conditions and individual building and roof characteristics, such as size, use and insulation values. Greater energy savings are weighted toward a reduction in summer heat gain through shading, thermal mass and evapotranspiration, rather than in winter heat loss. Of critical importance in low-rise green-roofed buildings is their thermal resiliency, or their ability to maintain acceptable interior conditions when exterior conditions reach extremes (heat waves and cold spells), especially during a blackout or brownout.The Cities of Portland, OR and Chicago, IL have been very successful with their green roofing efforts by offering density bonus incentives in their zoning codes. This type of policy promoted nationally may accelerate green roof deployment. Federal tax credits to building owners are another avenue. We believe however, that updating the National Model Building Energy Code Standards (Page 12 of my testimony) will lead to the greatest deployment of all building energy savings strategies and technologies.


3. Do you believe the Federal Energy Management Program is an effective vehicle for the acceleration of green roof deployment in the federal building sector?

Yes, the Federal Energy Management Program is charged with assisting federal agencies to use energy, water, and other resources wisely; green roofing is an effective design option that accomplishes these goals.

 

EVALUATION OF STUDY Titled “Achieving 30% and 50% over ASHRAE 90.1-2004 in a Low-Rise Office Building”, Prepared for NAIOP (Commercial Real Estate Development Association), Published December 2008

After a thorough review of the NAIOP-commissioned energy efficiency study, it is my professional opinion that the study is of no value and is intentionally misleading for the following reasons:

  1. The study analyzes a square-shaped, four-story office building configuration with completely sealed windows and an equal amount of un-shaded glass on all four sides of the building. In other words, the study analyzes an extremely inefficient and outdated building design typology.
  2. The study looks at only three cities and climates – Newport Beach, Chicago and Baltimore – and does so without changing the design of the building to respond to these very different climates.
  3. Of the numerous energy saving measures that can be applied to, or integrated into a building design, the study analyzes only five measures.
  4. The study intentionally does not analyze any of the readily available (and well known) low-cost, no-cost and cost-saving measures that reduce a building’s energy consumption. For instance, the study does not investigate changing the shape of the building, its orientation or form; redistributing windows or using different windows to take advantage of natural light for daylighting or sunlight for heating (office buildings are day-use facilities); shading the glass in summertime to reduce the need for air-conditioning; using operable windows for ventilation (not even in Newport Beach, with its beautiful year-round climate); or using low-e glazing. It also does not investigate employing a heat recovery system, cost-effective solar hot water heating system or energy management control system. In fact, the study fails to analyze so many of the no-cost and inexpensive energy-saving options available, that it is impossible for the building configuration studied to reach commonly achievable energy-consumption-reduction targets.
  5. NAIOP contends that its analysis is “aimed at understanding the practical and economical impacts” of energy efficiency measures available. Yet, the study intentionally analyzes high-cost, low-energy-reduction measures to falsely demonstrate that increases in efficiency are expensive and unachievable. For example, the roof area in a four-story building is only 25% of the building floor area. Increasing the insulation values in the roof well beyond code will yield only marginal efficiency results and at steep costs. However, seven roof insulation options are analyzed in this category (see Graph 1. below).
  6. Upgrading to commonplace low-e double glazing is 6.5 times more efficient at half the cost per square foot than upgrading to R-38 roof insulation, yet the study does not consider this option.
  7. The study is statistically irrelevant. A four-story office building represents less than one percent (approx. 0.29%) of commercial building square footage and 0.08% of all building square footage in the US*. A four-story, square office building with equally distributed sealed glazing on all four sides is a small fraction of this 0.08%.

* Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, 2007 Building Energy Data Book, Tables 2.2.2, 2.2.3 and 7.4.2, and the EIA AEO 2008, Tables 4 and 5.

Sea Level Rise Greater Than Expected

Bad News for the US

A new report appearing in today’s Science magazine, ‘Kinematic Constraints on Glacier Contributions to 21st-Century Sea-Level Rise’, projects a sea level rise of up to two meters this century. Many Americans are unaware of how little a rise in sea level is required to devastate the US. According to Architecture 2030’s sea level rise study, ‘Nation Under Siege’, beginning with just one meter, hundreds of US cities and towns along the East Coast, Gulf of Mexico and West Coast would be inundated – from East Boston MA, Point Pleasant NJ, Charleston SC and Miami FL on the Atlantic to Cape Coral and Tampa FL, New Orleans LA, and Galveston TX on the Gulf to Foster City CA and Seaside OR on the Pacific.

Prior to 1996, the rate of sea level rise was approximately two millimeters per year. Since 1996, the rate of sea level rise has almost doubled to 3.4 millimeters per year, the increase being due to land-based ice melt in Greenland and West Antarctica (see graph below). NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory recently launched a new website measuring the planet’s vital signs, including sea level rise.

Charleston,SC 1.5M Saint Augustine, FL 1M
Charleston, SC: 1.5m rise Saint Augustine, FL: 1.0m rise
Sea Level Rise Sea Level Rise Chart
Hampton Beach, NH: 1.0m rise Sea Level Rise (source: Josh Willis, NASA jpl)

Sea level rise is already having a significant impact on US coastal areas. “Flooding of low-lying regions by storm surges and spring tides is becoming more frequent and causing more damage and disruptions. Around the Chesapeake Bay, wetlands are being submerged, fringe forests are dying and being converted to marsh, farmland and lawns are being converted to marsh; and some roads are routinely flooded at high tides. ‘Ghost forests’ of standing dead trees killed by salt-water intrusion are becoming increasingly common in southern New Jersey, Maryland, Virginia, Louisiana, and North Carolina. Rising sea level is gradually intruding into estuaries and threatening fresh-water aquifers”, according to a recent study (draft) from the US Climate Change Science Program.

Rising Seas On the South Carolina Coast

Using Architecture 2030 maps and video, the Southern Alliance for Clean Energy (SACE) created the following video on the impacts of rising sea level on the Charleston, SC area:


Rising Seas: Challenges and Opportunities for the Lowcountry

Rising Seas: Challenges and Opportunities for the Lowcountry from Open Dome Studios on Vimeo.

Mazria Unveils Blueprint at Historic Energy Summit

Energy Independence is Within Reach

This week, at a historic gathering of industry leaders, scientists, policy experts and elected officials, Edward Mazria laid out a path for US energy independence.

The roster of speakers at the first annual National Clean Energy Summit, hosted by US Senator Harry Reid, the Center for American Progress Action Fund and the University of Nevada Las Vegas, read as a Who’s Who of individuals at the forefront of solving our energy and climate crises. Alongside Mazria, the lineup included Senator Reid, Arizona Governor Janet Napolitano, Colorado Governor Bill Ritter, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, oilman T. Boone Pickens and President Clinton, who, in his keynote address, stressed the importance of the Building Sector in addressing climate change.

In his talk, Mazria unveiled the 2030 Blueprint, a three-pronged solution that uses building energy efficiency, homeowner choices and renewable energy to completely replace conventional coal by the year 2025 and to free up natural-gas-generated electricity for mass transit and plug-in hybrid and electric vehicles by 2030. To implement the 2030 Blueprint, Mazria calls for 1) upgrading the National Building Energy Conservation Code Standard to meet the 2030 Challenge targets, 2) investing $21.6 billion a year for five years in building energy efficiency and 3) passing federal legislation requiring an aggressive Renewable Portfolio Standard of at least 30% for electricity generation.

The 2030 Blueprint

1. The Energy Information Administration (EIA) estimates that by 2030 US electricity consumption will increase by 6.97 Qbtu. The entire increase is due to additional demand in electricity for building operations.
2. By implementing the 2030 Blueprint, the US can phase out the use of conventional coal by 2025 and free up natural gas for other uses by 2030.

Architecture 2030 will release a new study in September, describing in detail how to implement the 2030 Blueprint. The 2030 Blueprint was outlined previously in a study released by Architecture 2030 in April 2008.

Major Victory in the Midwest: The Minnesota Sustainable Building 2030 Bill

The Architecture 2030 Challenge is now law in the state of Minnesota.

On May 8, Governor Tim Pawlenty signed the Minnesota Sustainable Building 2030 bill, which requires that buildings receiving state funding meet energy efficiency targets of the 2030 Challenge with a 60% reduction in 2010, 70% in 2015, 80% in 2020 and 90% in 2025.

Minnesota proponents of the Architecture 2030 Challenge testified in support of the bill to the Minnesota Senate and House Energy Committees. Architecture 2030 would like to thank Perkins+Will, The Weidt Group, Studio 2030, Minnesota Center for Energy and Environment, the University of Minnesota Center for Sustainable Building Research, LHB Architects, Architectural Alliance, the Green Institute, Indigenous Environmental Network and the many other individuals and organizations whose efforts helped secure this historic legislation.

Minnesota now joins the ranks of California, Illinois, Dallas, Santa Barbara, Richmond, Albuquerque, the Federal Government and others who are working to implement the 2030 Challenge targets. The Minnesota Sustainable Building 2030 Bill was authored by Representative Bill Hilty and Senator Yvonne Pretner Solon and co-authored by Senators Scott Dibble, Dave Senjem, Ellen Anderson and Julie Rosen and Representatives Jeremy Kalin, Brita Sailer, Kate Knuth, Alice Hausman, Bob Gunther, Matt Dean, Linda Slocum, Maria Ruud and David Bly.

View the Sustainable Building 2030 bill online (SF 2706 and HF 3401).

Successes in 2007

It’s Been A Great Year!

Congratulations are in order for all of you who have helped us at Architecture 2030 get our message out. We’re looking forward to the challenges and opportunities of the New Year. We want to take this opportunity to thank you for your support. Have a wonderful holiday season!

PBS e2Architecture 2030
The half-hour PBS series e2–design, which features Architecture 2030, begins on December 28, 2007. e2–design (the economies of being environmentally conscious) is a six–part series that explores the vitality of the environment through architecture. Narrated by Brad Pitt, the Architecture 2030 episode introduces Edward Mazria, The 2030 Challenge and the drive to address today’s most pressing issue, climate change.

UCTV Features Mazria Lecture, Global Warming: Nation Under Siege
UCTV will feature Edward Mazria’s keynote talk, Nation Under Siege, delivered at the University of California San Diego, on October 29, 2007. The talk will air from January 21, 2008 through January 27, 2008.

ARCHITECTURE 2030 – Year in Review Highlights
This has been a very productive year for Architecture 2030 and The 2030 Challenge. First cities, then states, and just last week, the feds have taken up the Challenge targets. The following highlights the progress made in 2007:

  • February – The 2010 Imperative: Global Emergency Teach–in
    A quarter million people from 47 countries gathered on February 20, 2007 to participate in The 2010 Imperative: A Global Emergency Teach–in. During this live interactive webcast, Architecture 2030 issued The 2030 Challenge and The 2010 Imperative, specific achievable strategies to transform the built environment.
  • May – The 2030 Challenge Benchmark Set
    The American Institute of Architects (AIA), the American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air–Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE), Architecture 2030, the Illuminating Engineering Society of North America (IESNA), and the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC), supported by representatives of the US Department of Energy, finalized an agreement of understanding, establishing a common starting point (benchmark) and a goal of net zero energy buildings.
  • June – The State of Illinois Adopts The 2030 Challenge
    The State of Illinois legislature voted for final passage of Senate Joint Resolution 27, adopting the 2030 Challenge for all state buildings.
  • August – City of Vancouver Adopts The 2030 Challenge
    The City of Vancouver adopted The 2030 Challenge target of carbon–neutral buildings by 2030.
  • September – Nation Under Siege: Sea Level Rise at Our Doorstep
    Architecture 2030’s landmark sea level rise study published. In stunning graphics, the study projects that beginning with just one meter of sea level rise, the US would be physically under siege, with calamitous and destabilizing consequences.
  • September – California Public Utilities Commission Adopts 2030 Targets
    California Public Utilities Commission officials set a goal of building only “zero net energy” homes by 2020 and only commercial buildings that require no outside energy by 2030.
  • September – “Think You’re Making a Difference?”, New Yorker Magazine
    Architecture 2030 places an informative full–page ad in New Yorker magazine, regarding the US Building Sector and coal-fired power plants. New Yorker magazine distributes 1,500 copies of the study “Nation Under Siege” to its Hot List.
  • September – “Want to Stop Global Warming?”, New York Times
    Architecture 2030 places an informative full–page ad in the New York Times, outlining the critical global warming issues and the steps necessary to prevent dangerous climate change.
  • October – Richmond, VA, Adopts 2030 Challenge
    Mayor L. Douglas Wilder announced October 3 that his City of Richmond, Va., had adopted the 2030 Challenge with the intent of making the capital of that commonwealth carbon neutral by the year 2030.
  • October – Santa Barbara Approves Architecture 2030 Energy Ordinance
    A glowing Santa Barbara City Council unanimously approved the Architecture 2030 Energy Ordinance, legislation that, if approved by the California Energy Commission, will give Santa Barbara some of the most stringent environmental building standards in the state.
  • November / December – “America: Nowhere To Hide”, NY Times, Roll Call and BusinessWeek
    Architecture 2030 puts a richly–illustrated full–page ad in the New York Times, Roll Call and BusinessWeek, outlining the vulnerability of US coastal cities and towns to small increments of sea level rise.
  • December – California Energy Commission Adopts The 2030 Challenge Benchmark
    Energy–efficiency goals adopted by the California Energy Commission should make all new homes so energy–efficient by 2020 that they won’t need to draw power from the state’s electrical grid, according to a plan for meeting the state’s future energy needs…. The plan calls for applying the same standard to commercial buildings by 2030.
  • December – President Signs Energy Bill Containing The 2030 Challenge Targets
    After being passed by the Senate and the House of Representatives, the Energy Independence and Security Act became law with the President’s signature. Section 433 of this bill requires that all federal buildings meet the energy performance standards of The 2030 Challenge.