For more information contact [email protected]
WASHINGTON (August 30, 2021) –ULI Greenprint Center for Building Performance’s annual report found a 12.4% reduction in carbon emissions in 2020 compared with an average 3.5% fall in previous years. In addition, the report found that real estate owners took advantage of reduced occupancy during the pandemic to double the implementation of energy efficiency projects.
The annual report, benchmarking 11,991 properties in 30 countries, shows the impact of COVID-19 on building performance. Reductions were much larger than previous years, likely due to lower utilisation of properties: carbon dioxide emissions were down 12.4%, water consumption down 8.1%, energy consumption down 12.5%, electricity use down 12.4%, natural gas use down 8.9%, landfill waste down 11.7% and waste diversion down 6.6%.
With many office and retail assets largely unoccupied, the number of ESG projects implemented increased significantly. In 2020, members reported a total of 14,793 projects. Highlights included:
- Boston Properties achieved enterprise-level Fitwel Viral Response certification and developed a Health Security Plan, focusing on air and water quality, physical distancing, cleaning, pandemic-ready provisions, and communications
- Prologis completed construction on its Netherlands Eindhoven DC4 warehouse, a highly efficient property that produces more renewable energy than it consumes
- NEO achieved net zero carbon operations by procuring 100 percent renewable geothermal power through its utility at no cost premium
Investment in ESG projects was more than matched by a quadrupling of building certifications in 2020, mainly in industrial, office and residential properties. LEED remained the most common holistic sustainability certification in the U.S., while BREEAM accounted for most new certifications in Europe and NABERS the majority in Asia Pacific. Health and wellbeing-focused certifications also increased, with over three times the number of Fitwel certifications achieved in 2020.
A new goal to achieve net zero carbon operations by 2050 was signed up to by a core of 17 Greenprint members, representing over $570 billion in assets under management and over 3,300 properties. Greenprint members made the biggest strides toward net zero by acquiring utility-provided green power and buying renewable energy certificates. The report endorses building electrification as a means of achieving a fully renewable-powered building, despite the potential to increase energy consumption in the short term.
Smaller reductions reported from on-site renewables reflects current challenges of on-site power generation and the significant potential for utilities and off-site power purchase agreements to meet demand for low-carbon electricity. On-site solar nonetheless remains a high-priority renewable energy investment strategy for Greenprint members. Of the 70 carbon-related ESG projects reported in 2020, 50 focused on solar.
Marta Schantz, Senior Vice President at ULI Greenprint Center for Building Performance, commented, “The remaining years of this decade are critically important for keeping global warming below 1.5 degrees Celsius. Global emissions dipped briefly during the pandemic, but rebounded quickly. There’s no complacency among the most responsible owners, investors and developers. Greenprint members took the opportunity of lower occupancy levels to conduct energy efficiency retrofits and up their game on energy efficiency..”
The Greenprint members’ new net zero goal uses the World Green Building Council’s definition of net zero, which is a portfolio that is highly energy efficient and fully powered by on-site or off-site renewables, and is based on CDP scope 1 and 2 greenhouse gas emissions and direct operational control (excluding occupant operations). Greenprint members can choose to go beyond scope 1 and 2 to include occupant operations. Greenprint recognizes that carbon emissions from tenant energy use and from embodied carbon from building materials must also be reduced over time.
The full report is available at uli.org/stateofgreen.
ULI Greenprint is hosting a webinar on September 15 at 1pm EDT to explore the report’s projects, findings, and implications for real estate, such as:
- How did COVID affect the industry’s performance?
- Did energy consumption decrease proportionally with building vacancy?
- How are leading firms achieving continued carbon reductions and making the investments pencil?
Registration is available here. Any members of the press interested in registering for the webinar please contact [email protected].
About the Urban Land Institute
The Urban Land Institute (ULI) is a nonprofit education and research institute supported by its members. Its mission is to shape the future of the built environment for transformative impact in communities worldwide. Established in 1936, the Institute has more than 45,000 members worldwide representing all aspects of land use and development disciplines. For more information on ULI, please visit uli.org or follow us on Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, and Instagram.
For more information, contact [email protected].
About ULI Greenprint
The ULI Greenprint Center for Building Performance is a worldwide alliance of leading real estate owners, investors, and strategic partners committed to improving the environmental performance of the global real estate industry. Through measurement, benchmarking, knowledge sharing, and implementation of best practices, Greenprint and its members strive to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 50 percent by 2030 and achieve net zero carbon operations by 2050.
The Greenprint like-for-like analysis excludes buildings with less than 24 months of data collected, with over 50 percent change in energy use from year to year, and with energy use intensities between 3.15 and 3,153 kilowatt-hours per square meter. The analysis does not account for additional variables such as heating and cooling degree days, vacancy rates, and occupant density. The analysis does not normalize for changes in building performance due to COVID.