The building sector and governments have made progress but are not doing enough to improve energy efficiency in the built environment -- and will not meet targets to address global climate change unless sweeping action is taken immediately to slash energy use, according to a new report by the World Business Council for Sustainable Development.
"The building sector must radically cut energy consumption -- starting now -- if countries are to achieve energy security and manage climate change," the report says.
The report, "Transforming the Market: Energy Efficiency in Buildings" was released Monday in Geneva, Washington, D.C., Beijing and Paris, where it was presented at the Alliance to Save Energy's EE Global Forum and Exposition.
The 69-page report is the product of a four-year, $15-million study by WBCSD. It is the first to inventory current building stock and projected future building stock -- and to provide an analysis based on that information and the modeled effects of consumer preferences and behaviors, design, technology and policy on energy consumption in six major markets: Brazil, China, Europe, India, Japan and the U.S. The markets represent almost two-thirds of the world's energy use.
The study is the broadest and most comprehensive of three recently issued research findings on different aspects of energy efficiency and buildings. The report is also the most emphatic in stating the need for urgent improvement.
"False optimism breeds complacency" and key players must avoid "sleepwalking into crises" as well as doing too little too late, the report says.
"Our analysis clearly shows the scale of the challenge and the impossibility of meeting it at current rates of progress," says the report. "Our conclusion: Under current financial and policy conditions, building decisionmakers will not spend sufficiently on energy efficiency, even on investments that pay off over a project lifetime. Financial timescales for owners of both residential and commercial buildings are generally too short to allow improvements that would save energy and pay off over the lifetime of the investments."
In addition to the warnings, the WBCSD report provides a roadmap on how to address the problem by achieving a worldwide average of a 55 percent reduction in building energy use by 2050.
The report says its recommendations would help shrink the world's energy related carbon footprint by 77 percent, or 48 gigatons, which would in turn help stabilize CO2 levels at the threshold called for by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. The report notes, however, that some developed countries -- the U.S. among them -- will have to drive energy use in buildings down so that it is at least 80 percent below "business-as-usual" levels.
Potential barriers to progress include market and policy failures, inadequate knowledge and understanding among building professionals in the building industry and poor behavior of building users.
The report adds, however, that the situation can be turned around with the right financial mechanisms and relationships, holistic building design and a wholesale change in the behavior by building professionals and building occupants.
The study recommends the following actions with the first four measures to be taken by policymakers and government:
• Strengthen codes and labeling for increased transparency"We must start now to aggressively reduce energy use in new and existing buildings," the WBCSD report says.
• Provide incentives for energy efficient investments
• Encourage integrated design approaches and innovations
• Develop and use advanced technology to enable energy-saving
behaviors
• Develop workforce capacity for energy saving
• Mobilize for an energy aware culture