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New California Building Code to Save Billions

mark handler

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New California Building Code to Save Billions

Posted May 31, 2012 in Living Sustainably, Solving Global Warming

http://switchboard.nrdc.org/blogs/nhorowitz/biggest_energy_hogs_cut_waste.html

Today the California Energy Commission voted 4-0 to adopt new energy efficiency standards for residential and commercial buildings in California. This move will update the existing 2013 California Building Energy Efficiency Standards, also known as Title 24. As a result, new construction buildings in California as well as major alterations and additions to existing buildings will be amongst the most energy efficient in the nation when the new rules take effect on January 1, 2014.

Thanks to these standards, owners and tenants will be assured of having new buildings that sip rather than gulp energy when providing heating & cooling, lighting, or hot water. According to the CEC estimates, Californians can expect energy savings of 25% for homes, 30% for commercial buildings, and 14% for low rise multifamily buildings. While we are awaiting the final numbers from the CEC, we can bank on that these standards will provide massive benefits and savings over the next 30 years, including:

Avoiding the need to build 6 large (500 MW) power plants;

Saving tenants and building owners several billion dollars in the form of lower electricity and natural gas bills; and,

Preventing the emission of several million tons of CO2, the main pollutant responsible for climate change.

These standards are the present that keeps on giving

That’s because the building envelope and systems such as insulation, efficient windows and heating & cooling equipment that are initially installed often last 30 to 50 plus years. When built to be energy efficient, occupants in these buildings are much more comfortable during hot summer days and utility bills remain lower year after year. It’s also a lot easier and cheaper to add the right amount of insulation or install energy efficient windows during the construction phase than it is to rip open walls or replace windows for more efficient ones after the building is completed.

In addition to the building energy code improvements, the Commission has been simultaneously working hard to make sure the appliances and gadgets we bring into our home and businesses are energy efficient as well. Look no further than the pioneering TV efficiency standards recently set by the Commission which will reduce new TV energy use by up to 50% and save consumers more than a billion dollars annually in the form of lower electric bills.

Its forward thinking policies like these that enable California to hold per capita electricity use essentially flat over the past 30 years while the rest of the nation saw per capita electricity use increase by nearly 50%.

That’s why NRDC supports the new energy efficiency standards for commercial and residential buildings in California. Let’s continue to support cutting edge policies that make efficiency standards stronger so they continue to bring tangible benefits to all Californians.
 
This code will not be applicable untill January of 2014 along with the rest of the 2013 California Building Standards
 
$2,290 intial cost @ 4% mortage note equals a monthly payment of $10.93 X 360 payments = $3934.80 in P&I

$2,290

+ $3,934.80

=$6224.80 total

In reality it will cost the home owner $24.80 more money when the code goes into effect and if interest rates go up it will cost more

If it really saves 25% in utility bills then great in my case it would be about an 18 year break even point

Avoiding the need to build 6 large (500 MW) power plants
That is just kicking the can further down the road

Its forward thinking policies like these that enable California to hold per capita electricity use essentially flat over the past 30 years while the rest of the nation saw per capita electricity use increase by nearly 50%.
That is great but it is not sustainable forever new plants will need to be built

Preventing the emission of several million tons of CO2, the main pollutant responsible for climate change.
Carbon Dioxide is not a pollutant it is what all plant life survives on.
 
mtlogcabin you hit a sore spot.

To say that carbon monoxide is not a polutant stretches reality.

Suggest you look at Butte and Anaconda. In the interests of the mines they denuded the hills of trees, the fumes from the furnaces caused much polution, and the towns became super fund sites. The water in the Berkely Pit is so poluted that birds that land on the water cannot fly away.

Carbon monoxide in sufficient concentrations can cause problems but in order to burn the fuel you release a lot of additional polutants.

The fact that there is still a lot of beautiful country in Montana should not make us blind to the problems.
 
CO2 is Carbon Dioxide which is needed to sustain all plant life on this planet. Without it there is no photosynthesis process which means there will be no oxygen produced for us to breathe

CO Carbon Monoxide is deadly and a pollutant as you pointed out

To my knowledge Carbon Monoxide is not being blamed for causing climate change
 
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