Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Green premium? Not so, as it continues to pay to go green with commercial buildings

There's a lot of greenwash in the commercial real estate industry, fostered by pundits and proponents alike. Separating fact from fiction and reality from distortion is a challenge. Except, of course, when it comes to the facts.

Take a recent report from CoStar and the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC): Green Premium Continues to Justify Implementation Costs for Building Owners. This one's good, and it's real.

A few snippets:
  • The economic payback for building owners from 'going green' has been tested in the crucible of the worst economy since the Great Depression, and while the premiums in rental rates, faster lease-up times and lower vacancy associated with green buildings varies market to market, the corresponding increases in rental income, together with the resulting energy savings in operating the property, continue to justify the modest additional costs associated with going green in most markets.
  • For tenants, a growing body of research continues to show that buildings with better air quality, natural lighting and variable temperature control yield greater productivity by employees. Also, separate metering and individual utility billing of tenants for their energy use encourages conservation and additional cost savings.
  • One big change, however, has been the market shift in LEED certifications from new development. Today, much of the USGBC's certification activity has shifted to LEED for Existing Buildings (LEED-EB), which has seen certifications jump sharply from less than 15% of all certifications in early 2008 to more than 35% in second-quarter 2010.
  • Class A LEED office buildings that completed construction before the recession hold a significant advantage over the national average for all Class A office buildings, with the LEED buildings averaging $28.50 per square foot in rent with an average vacancy rate of 6.5%, compared with $25.89 per square foot in average rent and an average vacancy of 10.7% for all Class A office stock.
Green is, well, green. At Octus Energy, we're acutely focused on the economic virtues of improving the operating efficiency of commercial buildings -- slash utility bills first which then drives building certifications (e.g., LEED and Energy Star).

"We do find that it does continue to pay to go green," CoStar Vice President of Analytics Norm Miller said. "In the long run buildings that do not include sustainable features run the very real risk of becoming obsolete. And it will likely be very risky to own buildings that do not have sustainable features in the future."

"We also know that tenants in green buildings enjoy higher levels of productivity and see a real benefit and value to having their employees in green buildings. Because there are still so few green buildings out there many tenants haven't experienced that impact yet. But we believe this will change in time as those markets become more educated and tenants begin to pursue the productivity benefits of green buildings," Miller said. "We expect rental premiums or energy savings to more than justify the added costs for energy saving green features like separate meters, motion detection light devices, or water savings devices."

2 comments:

gjervis said...

I really hope Octus is getting some of this work, would be good to hear some form of revenue generation soon.

Parag said...

Thousands of architects, consultants, engineers, product marketers, environmentalists and other building industry professionals around the country have a demonstrated knowledge of green building and the LEED rating system and process -- and can assist you in meeting your LEED goal.
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