October 22, 2009
In This Issue GreenBuzz
  » Latest News: Greener Cities, the Most Energy Efficient States, WaterSense and More
  » Featured News: Bioneers and the Living Building Challenge
  » Insight: Greener Airports, Urban Farming and the Good Food Revolution
  » Podcast: How and Where GE Is Placing Its Cleantech Bets
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The Mother of Necessity

By Rob Watson

I'm here in Jerusalem attending the Israeli Presidential Conference 2009: Facing Tomorrow. It's very exciting to see the path-breaking new technologies coming out here in energy, water and information management.

Abundant in nature's flows of sunlight and poor in nature's stocks of fossil fuels and flow of water, if ever there was a country where green building should be flourishing, it's here.

Yet, Israel is a study in contrasts: On one hand, it has required solar water heating on new buildings for over 25 years -- 90 percent of homes have solar hot water -- and basic water-saving fixtures are commonplace. On the other hand, it wasn't until 2009 that anything resembling a comprehensive approach to codifying the reduction of building energy consumption was finally approved and I've yet to see a waterless urinal in my admittedly limited time here. 

So it's got me thinking: What does it take to get people off the stick to implement sustainability in buildings?

Information (including true eco-nomic pricing of finite resources) is clearly one very important element. The good news is that decent information on building performance is becoming more readily available on a timely basis. 

Now the challenge is to do something with it.

On the policy front, best practices website put together by Green Cities California (www.GreenCitiesCalifornia.org) is a great example of this.  Although somewhat misleadingly grouped under “Urban Design,” the website features the ordinances, requirements and promotional materials developed to implement several very successful municipal green building programs. 

To the bottom 10 states in ACEEE's new state scorecard on energy efficiency policies: Take note.

With nearly $1 trillion of water infrastructure upgrades estimated to be required over the next decade to maintain the safe delivery of drinking water and treatment of sewage, the EPA WaterSense label is quite welcome, though arguably long overdue. 

So, what took 'em so long? 

Well, water is at best a quasi-market public good, so it will never be priced commensurate with its value.  The concept of a “lifeline” tariff for basic, efficient water consumption, followed by steeply inclining rates for higher use, by and large seems to have eluded regulators. So, we will continue to flush our toilets with drinking water in the desert and other fractally-stupid building practices . . . until we can't.

In another what-took-'em-so-long? effort, GreenBiz.com Managing Editor Matthew Wheeland writes about a new University of Manchester European research effort (air travel in the U.S. is all hunky-dory, thank you) to determine whether modern IT methods can help improve the efficiency of airport operations in everything from airplane takeoff schedules to baggage handling.  Hmmm . . . ya think? 

While they're at it, they ought to check out this really cool hybrid magnetic brake/drive system being developed by Delos Aerospace, which employs the same principles of dynamic braking used by hybrid cars to use the momentum of the plane to generate braking power, as well as allows the plane to drive itself around the airport using on-board electric motors, saving tons of fuel and emissions (literally) and improving gate turnover because the plane's not waiting for those funky lead-filled push-back thingies.

This week's Look-Grandpa-I-picked-up-the-$20-bill-you-said-was-fake-but-it's-real! award goes to Dell and Chipotle restaurants for their comprehensive sustainability efforts -- including lots of new PV capacity. Dell's sustainability efforts will save them nearly $6 million per year.

Rob Watson
Executive Editor,
GreenerBuildings.com
You can reach Rob at
rob.watson@greenerworldmedia.com or follow him on Twitter @KilrWat
.



   The Latest News on Environmentally Responsible Building and Development
Green Cities California Unveils Best Practices Website
By Rob Watson

Green Cities California, the collaborative of 10 cities and counties acknowledged as sustainability leaders, launches a website today that's to serve as a resource for other communities striving to go green.... Read More



Enterprise Community Partners Commits $4B to Green 75,000 Units in Five Years

California, Massachusetts Top State Energy Efficiency Scorecard

EPA Sets WaterSense Standard for First Commercial Building Product

Chipotle to Mount Solar Panels at 75 Restaurants, Dell Installs Arrays at Its HQ

Sodexo Partners with Net Impact to Launch Sustainability Fellowship


   Featured News
At the Bioneers Conference, Living Building Challenge is a Growing Idea
By Rob Watson

The Living Building Challenge sets a much higher bar for green buildings than other rating systems, but also allows much more latitude for innovation. Buildings that are striving to meet it criteria have used a number of building and energy-saving methods, including some gleaned from nature.
 ... Read More


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   GreenBiz Radio
How and Where GE Is Placing Its Cleantech Bets
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   Columns and Blogs
Matthew Wheeland
Can IT Make Airports Greener -- and More Efficient?
> Read more...
Will Allen
Sowing the Seeds of a Good Food Revolution
> Read more...

      FEATURED RESOURCES

Incremental Cost, Measurable Savings

This report highlights the incremental cost of building to meet Enterprise Green Communities Criteria and outlines the long-term benefits of green building methods.

Bottom line: Estimated lifetime savings from green and affordable housing exceed the initial investment necessary to create it, the study says.





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