USGBC Advancing-Building-Decarbonization 2024
USGBC Advancing-Building-Decarbonization 2024
USGBC Advancing-Building-Decarbonization 2024
USGBC Advancing
Building Decarbonization
March 2024
From Vision to Action: USGBC Advancing Building Decarbonization | 1
Scientists have spelled out the global climate challenge loud and clear: We must cut our global carbon
emissions by at least 50% by 2030 to stave off the worst impacts of global warming. As signs of climate
change are increasingly evident around the globe, it is impossible to ignore—and governments and
corporations are committing to reducing emissions.
In this context, the Buildings Breakthrough was launched at COP This annual ranking
28 to collaborate in moving toward the vision of worldwide near- highlights countries and
zero-emission and resilient buildings. This resonates with USGBC, regions outside the United
as we have been working for our entire 30-year history to show States that are making
how partnership and collaboration can work to support shared significant strides in
climate, health and resilience goals. sustainable building design,
construction and operations.
The question today is: How do we scale and ensure rapid adoption
of proven practices to reduce buildings’ whole life carbon impact?
At USGBC, we are bringing all our tools and resources to meet this challenge. Our newly released 2024–
2026 strategic plan underscores the priority we are placing on climate action—and our leveraging of our
unique role to make change happen. USGBC brings together diverse decision makers in the buildings
industry: an array of public and private entities including architects and engineers, building developers,
owners, tenants, operators, product manufacturers, and professionals in the finance and insurance, retail,
hospitality and government sectors at all levels. The common thread is a motivation to do better.
Building decarbonization starts with well-insulated and -sealed envelopes and high efficiency systems to
reduce energy needs, and then meets those needs with low-carbon sources (such as renewable energy)
from on-site, grid or purchase. Buildings can further reduce operational carbon with grid integration and
demand response, smart technology, and energy and thermal storage, as well as by reducing indoor and
outdoor water needs and all forms of waste.
Decarbonizing buildings also means addressing the embodied carbon in materials, including initial
construction and renovations, plus emissions from construction site activity and equipment. For example,
buildings can reduce the embodied emissions of building materials such as concrete and steel, which
require large amounts of energy to produce.
We can’t meet our urgent climate goals without addressing existing buildings as well as new ones.
Consider this: With proven decarbonization strategies becoming available and cost-competitive,
commercial buildings in the U.S. have become 37% less carbon-intensive and 26% more energy-efficient
on average, according to USGBC’s report “State of Decarbonization: Progress in U.S. Commercial
Buildings 2023.” However, despite these significant reductions, overall sector emissions of commercial
buildings have remained flat since 1990, a result of significant increases in total building floor area.
The progress is a sign that we can make improvements, but we must make measurable and significant
progress on an absolute basis. In developed countries, that means getting serious about existing building
retrofits. They are not all going to be exemplary green buildings—but they can all deeply decarbonize.
“There are two big steps: First, electrify your building—stop burning fossil fuel on-site,” says Laurie Kerr,
principal climate advisor at USGBC. “Second, buildings must reduce their peak heating and cooling loads,
because that’s going to drive the size of the power grid.”
Another reason to take action: There is more financial help available. In the U.S., the landmark Inflation
Reduction Act provides funding to help decarbonize buildings, including incentives and rebates for
energy efficiency upgrades to new and existing buildings, plus incentives for on-site renewables, energy
storage, microgrids and EV charging infrastructure. It also includes the $27 billion Greenhouse Gas
Reduction Fund, which unlocks funds for energy retrofits. Listen to USGBC’s podcast with the U.S. EPA’s
Ted Toon.
“There are two big steps: first, electrify your building—stop burning fossil fuel on-site.
Second, buildings must reduce their peak heating and cooling loads, because that’s
going to drive the size of the power grid.”
“This version of LEED has to work for owners of existing buildings,” says Landreneau. With the overarching
goal of getting more buildings on the road to lower carbon, buildings will no longer have to meet certain
performance standards, such as Energy Star or ASHRAE 62.2, right away.
Instead, building owners will be prompted to conduct assessments for their carbon trajectory, climate
resilience and occupant needs. The LEED v5 for O+M rating system rewards energy performance and
the development of a decarbonization plan by thinking through building energy usage and sources and
installing energy monitors, among other steps.
While LEED v5 meets existing buildings where they are and pushes them ahead, it also provides a
recipe for building them right the first time. LEED v5 for Building Design and Construction (BD+C) will
likely require more advanced steps for decarbonization, particularly at the higher levels of certification,
including electrification, load reduction, grid interoperability and carbon neutrality, says Landreneau.
LEED v5 O+M also introduces a prerequisite that requires safe management and disposal of legacy
refrigerants and provides credit for observing global warming potential (GWP) limits for new refrigerants,
which are used in heating and cooling systems; many are potent greenhouse gases that can leak into
the atmosphere without proper planning for safe disposal. LEED BD+C incorporates GWP limits into the
prerequisite.
Cutting down embodied energy will have more weight in LEED v5 than it has in the past, with the
introduction of an embodied carbon prerequisite into LEED BD+C and considerable emphasis on planning
for circularity, existing building reuse and waste diversion in both LEED BD+C and LEED O+M.
Whole building reuse, including office-to-housing conversions, will also get credit for heavy lifting. “You
don’t have to build a new building from scratch to be eligible for LEED Gold or Platinum certification,”
notes Landreneau. “You can take that existing building, focus on aspects such as decarbonization,
resiliency, human health and well-being, and you can get that green building label.” Meanwhile, new
buildings designed to reduce embodied carbon through a life cycle assessment will see a bump in points.
To address the carbon emissions that exist in a company’s supply chain (scope 3 emissions), LEED v5 will
begin rewarding projects for specifying materials and finishes with less embodied carbon.
“We’ve been asking manufacturers to provide information about embodied carbon for the last 10 years,
and now we know what the range is, so you can switch to those with less,” says Sullens. “The low-hanging
fruit is to use lower-carbon-emissions concrete and steel with the highest percentage possible of recycled
content—and, very importantly, not to overengineer your building to begin with.”
As previous versions of LEED have done, LEED v5 will continue to advance and promote a holistic
approach to sustainability. “In terms of points, decarbonization accounts for about half, a quarter is
human health, and another quarter is ecology and biodiversity,” says Landreneau. “Equity and resilience
are a common throughline.”
As we continue to face the consequences of climate change, the integration of resilience into building
design and management is essential to saving lives and averting severe economic loss. Supporting a built
environment that is not only environmentally responsible, but also resilient in the face of an uncertain
climate future, is a critical component of USGBC’s mission.
USGBC has invested significant resources to solving the scale problem. We conducted countless
interviews to understand the drivers—and lack of drivers—in the market today. We looked at the tools and
data available, to understand the gaps, and we leveraged our data and our sustainability platform, Arc, to
stand up a pilot program.
This exclusive group of eight organizations represented over 140 million square feet across five
countries and 20 U.S. states. They included privately held and publicly traded organizations representing
multifamily, hotel, commercial office, local government and warehouse portfolios across the U.S., India,
U.K., Canada and Mexico. Through the pilot, we identified pain points that arise are when a company or
government decides to tackle its real estate portfolio emissions and identify a variety of ways to address
planning and implementation.
This is now translating into offering new tools for portfolios, including those that are not yet actively
engaged in green building certification programs. The program launching later this year is designed to
guide and support continuous improvement, verify performance outcomes of real estate portfolios, and
demonstrate progress across portfolio-level sustainability and resilience goals.
Leveraging their deep expertise in verifying sustainability achievements, USGBC and GBCI will unveil
this new tool at Greenbuild 2024, which will take place in November in Philadelphia. It will provide an
accurate measure of real estate portfolio performance, based on a well-defined set of metrics, including
decarbonization.
“What’s missing from a lot of organizations’ commitments are the tangible steps and measurable
improvements,” says Jeff Benavides, director of performance at scale and portfolios at USGBC. “We can
help them quantify those and verify they are actually doing what they claim.” Using this tool, corporations,
government entities and nonprofit organizations alike can add substance to their action plans, create
custom targets and verify portfolio-level performance. In the holistic spirit of LEED, it will track
decarbonization, along with a wide range of environmental and human impacts.
This program will offer an end-to-end solution for organizations to identify, plan and prioritize actions
across diverse portfolios. It facilitates the tracking and measurement of progress against custom
performance goals, leveraging data, analytics and tools. The inclusion of third party review and
verification by GBCI ensures credibility and compliance with sustainable real estate standards.
The program aims to provide universal, scalable solutions that will be applied to buildings at any stage
and condition, empowering organizations to drive action and accountability across their real estate
portfolios. By doing so, it supports the achievement and verification of organizational decarbonization
commitments and increases the number of buildings poised for green building leadership certification.
By lowering risk and transaction costs, IREE is helping enable greater investments in energy efficiency
retrofits, which can result in savings of 30–50% in energy costs, according to the Department of Energy.
The tool has already proven itself in the field: IREE is currently in use by Pacific Gas and Electric and by
the Canadian government to evaluate potential projects for $3 billion in green loans.
The LEED for Cities and Communities rating system tackles carbon reduction through many of its
goals for sustainable urban development, infrastructure and transportation. Local governments are
encouraged to adopt policies that promote energy efficiency, renewable energy and overall environmental
sustainability; plus, it emphasizes community engagement and use of data to make the best decisions.
In addition, USGBC has other programs for specific infrastructure that emphasize decarbonization along
with biodiversity and ecosystem restoration, resilience and other desirable impacts, taking advantage
of the unique levers that each offers. These include SITES for sustainable landscape projects, PEER for
optimizing the efficiency and reliability of utility companies and power systems of all sizes, and TRUE, a
certification program for zero waste achievements.
“There are the buildings, but then there’s the land that they sit on, the power
systems that support them, and the materials and resources that go into and come
out of the buildings. The suite of tools that we offer address the sustainability and
decarbonization implications of all of those components.”
• Promoting policies that incorporate resilience and adaptation strategies in building codes and
planning, ensuring that buildings are designed to withstand and recover from the impacts of climate
change while minimizing carbon-intensive reconstruction.
• Advocating for increased funding for support for innovative solutions that enhance energy efficiency
and reduce the carbon footprint of buildings. This includes recent U.S. federal bills, including the
Bipartisan Infrastructure Law and the Inflation Reduction Act, which has been called the nation’s
largest climate change package in history.
More than 30 years ago, USGBC was founded by a small group of individuals who believed in building a
more sustainable world. Over the next several decades, USGBC grew that idea into a global community of
leaders that transformed the design, construction and operation of buildings and communities to better
serve people, the planet and our climate. Today, USGBC represents thousands of organizations that have
delivered nearly 110,000 LEED-certified projects, representing the highest standard of sustainability in
more than 180 countries and territories globally.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS:
Ana Ka’ahanui (cover photos)
Lydia Lee (Interviews and content support)