The commercial sector in California presently consumes a whopping 38% of the state’s total electricity and 25% of its natural gas resources. Office buildings alone consume 10% and 6% of the state's electricity and natural gas resources respectively.
California has set some of the most aggressive green building policies in the nation, and to help track the state’s progress the Alliance has launched a Green Building Barometer, which will report the percentage of rentable building area certified green through LEED® or ENERGY STAR®. California is already making substantial progress: in April 2009, 35% of Class A commercial buildings were certified some level of “green” – whether LEED® or ENERGY STAR® – in CoStar Group’s real estate market database. One year later, this number jumped to 43%, meaning nearly 188 million square feet of rentable building area (RBA) in Class A commercial buildings in California is now certified “green”. Progress was substantial in Class B and C properties as well; but, there is much more to be done in those sectors, as less than 5% of the state’s 916 million square feet of RBA in Class B and C properties was certified green as of April 2010.
Some energy industry practitioners point to Assembly Bill 1103, which triggers the disclosure of a building’s energy performance under certain circumstances, as the catalyst for some of this increase in activity.
Check back here for periodic updates on the Green Building Barometer, as well as for information about policies and programs that appear to be driving green building growth in various regions of the state. In addition, watch out for timely marketing insights from the Alliance’s Advisory Committees and other key market participants.