green building adoption index

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CBRE presents Green Building Adoption Index 2014 June 2014

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Maastricht University’s Green Building Adoption Index is the first study to quantify the relevance of green building practices in the commercial real estate market. Based on EPA Energy Star and USGBC LEED statistical data from 2005 through 2013 the study examines more than 34,000 buildings totaling more than 3.5 billion square feet in the top 30 U.S. markets. The resulting evidence shows that green has become mainstream in the majority of U.S. cities.​​​

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Page 1: Green Building Adoption Index

CBRE presents

Green Building Adoption Index 2014June 2014

Page 2: Green Building Adoption Index

2© 2014 CBRE

$1,000,000 academic challenge launched in 2012

Developed to support academic work seeking sustainable solutions for the built environment

Provides both funding and active access to CBRE platform, clients and personnel to assist in pursuing projects

Five projects underway: Green Building Adoption Index (GBAI) is first published project

About the Real Green Research ChallengeGREEN BUILDING ADOPTION INDEX

Page 3: Green Building Adoption Index

3© 2014 CBRE

Chief objective: quantify and understand the dynamics of certified green building space in the top 30 US markets

Led by Dr. Nils Kok, Maastricht University

collaboration with Rogier Holtermans, Maastricht University

Data provided by USGBC and CBRE Research

3.5 billion square feet

34,000 buildings

About GBAIGREEN BUILDING ADOPTION INDEX

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4© 2014 CBRE

Two primary programs assess and identify building energy efficiency and sustainability characteristics for office buildings

EPA Energy Star

• 8,405 office buildings

• 1.9 billion feet

USGBC LEED certification

• 5,470 office buildings

• 970 million feet

About GBAIGREEN BUILDING ADOPTION INDEX

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5© 2014 CBRE

Rank State Projects Square footage (million) Per capita sq. ft.1 California 595 72.73 1.95

2 New York 259 37.84 1.95

3 Illinois 171 29.42 2.29

4 Virginia 160 16.87 2.11

5 Colorado 124 8.89 1.77

6 North Carolina 133 17.18 1.80

7 Maryland 119 12.70 2.20

8 Washington, D.C.* 106 19.52 32.45

9 Massachusetts 101 13.68 2.09

10 Minnesota 51 8.21 1.55

LEED ADOPTION PER 2013Top 10 states by number of projects

Source: USGBC, 2014*While D.C. is not a state, its LEED activity warranted inclusion

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6© 2014 CBRE

Rank (by projects) State Projects Square footage (million) Per capita sq. ft.1 (8) Washington, D.C.* 106 19.52 32.45

2 (3) Illinois 171 29.42 2.29

3 (7) Maryland 119 12.70 2.20

4 (4) Virginia 160 16.87 2.11

5 (9) Massachusetts 101 13.68 2.09

6 (1) California 595 72.73 1.95

6 (2) New York 259 37.84 1.95

7 (none) Oregon 47 6.99 1.83

8 (6) North Carolina 133 17.18 1.80

9 (5) Colorado 124 8.89 1.77

10 (10) Minnesota 51 8.21 1.55

Source: USGBC, 2014

LEED ADOPTION PER 2013Top 10 states by per capita square footage

*While D.C. is not a state, its LEED activity warranted inclusion

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7© 2014 CBRE

ENERGY STAR CERTIFICATIONS IN 2013Top 25 cities with the most certified buildingsRank Metro area # of buildings Square footage (million) Cost savings (million) Emissions prevented1 Los Angeles 443 102.7 $132.2 45,1002 Washington, DC 435 109.1 $119.0 69,8003 Atlanta 318 70.4 $53.4 52,5004 New York 303 113.8 $142.4 58,7005 San Francisco 289 74.7 $110.1 36,4006 Chicago 233 116.2 $91.3 105,9007 Dallas-Fort Worth 229 60.1 $43.9 42,6008 Denver 221 43.5 $40.2 50,2009 Philadelphia 210 34.5 $28.1 21,70010 Houston 204 82.6 $66.4 61,60011 Charlotte 176 23.0 $13.7 11,40012 Phoenix 156 24.2 $34.5 29,80013 Boston 141 38.5 $50.0 19,60014 Seattle 127 25.5 $23.6 13,00015 San Diego 123 17.2 $39.6 7,50016 Minneapolis-St. Paul 116 42.1 $51.4 52,70017 Sacramento 109 15.0 $21.1 7,90018 Miami 101 22.2 $20.7 18,20019 Cincinnati 84 17.2 $11.3 13,60020 San Jose 83 10.7 $17.3 6,50021 Columbus, Ohio 77 12.2 $11.6 12,10022 Riverside, Calif. 75 8.5 $7.2 2,50023 Detroit 73 15.5 $15.6 16,30024 Portland, Ore. 71 11.5 $9.1 5,80025 Louisville 60 6.5 $5.7 6,700

Source: Energy Star, 2014

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8© 2014 CBRE

Rank Metro area # of buildings Square footage (million) Cost savings (million) Emissions prevented6 Chicago 233 116.2 $91.3 105,9004 New York 303 113.8 $142.4 58,7002 Washington, DC 435 109.1 $119.0 69,8001 Los Angeles 443 102.7 $132.2 45,10010 Houston 204 82.6 $66.4 61,6005 San Francisco 289 74.7 $110.1 36,4003 Atlanta 318 70.4 $53.4 52,5007 Dallas-Fort Worth 229 60.1 $43.9 42,6008 Denver 221 43.5 $40.2 50,20016 Minneapolis-St. Paul 116 42.1 $51.4 52,70013 Boston 141 38.5 $50.0 19,6009 Philadelphia 210 34.5 $28.1 21,70014 Seattle 127 25.5 $23.6 13,00012 Phoenix 156 24.2 $34.5 29,80011 Charlotte 176 23.0 $13.7 11,40018 Miami 101 22.2 $20.7 18,20015 San Diego 123 17.2 $39.6 7,50019 Cincinnati 84 17.2 $11.3 13,60023 Detroit 73 15.5 $15.6 16,30017 Sacramento 109 15.0 $21.1 7,90021 Columbus, Ohio 77 12.2 $11.6 12,10024 Portland, Ore. 71 11.5 $9.1 5,80020 San Jose 83 10.7 $17.3 6,50022 Riverside, Calif. 75 8.5 $7.2 2,50025 Louisville 60 6.5 $5.7 6,700

ENERGY STAR CERTIFICATIONS IN 2013Ranking changes depending on the measure

Source: Energy Star, 2014

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9© 2014 CBRE

Measuring the fraction of green in the CRE market

Geographic boundaries for the 30 largest CBRE markets

Identification of labeled office space per market

GREEN BUILDING ADOPTION INDICESDiffusion of LEED and Energy Star (2005 – 2013)

LEED and Energy Star

• Office only• Tracking threshold• No LEED CI• No medical or government occupied

buildings

Label vintage

• Correct for label “depreciation”• 5 years for LEED• 2 years for Energy Star

Ratios

• Number of buildings• Sq. ft. of space

Developed in partnership with the USGBC and CBRE

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10© 2014 CBRE

NATIONAL ADOPTION OF LEED AND ENERGY STARSignificant growth over past decade

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11© 2014 CBRE

NATIONAL ADOPTION OF ENERGY STAR LABELSGrowth in diffusion seems to slow

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12© 2014 CBRE

NATIONAL ADOPTION OF THE LEED PROGRAMLater start, rapid increase in past five years

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13© 2014 CBRE

BREAKING DOWN THE DIFFERENT LEED PROGRAMSLEED EB accelerates diffusion

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14© 2014 CBRE

ADOPTION ACROSS LEED PROGRAMSLEED EB accounts for 75%

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15© 2014 CBRE

NATIONAL FINDINGS

2005 2013Total sq. ft. of Green buildings 5.6% 39.3%

Total # of Green Buildings 1.5% 13.2%

Total sq. ft. of Energy Star Labeled 5.1% 30.3%

Total # of Energy Star Labeled 1.3% 10.2%

Total sq. ft. of LEED certified .40% 19.4%

Total # of LEED certified .14% 5.1%

Total sq. ft. of LEED EB certified .11% 15.4%

Total # of LEED EB certified .03% 3.1%

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16© 2014 CBRE

Highest percentage of green building square footageTOP 10 GREENEST CITIES

Rank Market Square footage1 Minneapolis 77.0%2 San Francisco 67.2%3 Chicago 62.1%4 Houston 54.8%5 Atlanta 54.1%6 Los Angeles 49.7%7 Denver 49.3%8 Seattle 46.6%9 Miami 46.0%10 Washington, D.C. 42.2%

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17© 2014 CBRE

Lowest percentage of green building square footageGREEN CHALLENGED CITIES

Rank Market Square footage30 Pittsburgh 10.0%29 Kansas City 13.5%28 Stamford 13.9%27 Detroit 16.3%26 Baltimore 16.9%25 New Jersey 17.2%24 Milwaukee 20.0%23 St. Louis 24.2%22 Tampa 27.0%21 Phoenix 28.0%20 Portland 30.8%

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18© 2014 CBRE

Determinants

Regulation: Chapter 47.190’s Commercial Building Rating & Disclosure Ordinance, ≥ 50,000 sq. ft. buildings use Energy Star and water use tracking

Tenant demand: Market values green; deep cultural embedment

Facts

EPA ranking*: 16th

1st LEED building: Karges-Faulconbridge Office Building

LEED EB, Gold, 2004

Interesting building: 7601 Penn Avenue South

10x Energy Star, LEED EB Gold

#1 MINNEAPOLIS

*”Top 25 Cities with the Most ENERGY STAR Certified Buildings” 2014 Note: Green building adoption in percent until December 31, 2013

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19© 2014 CBRE

#2 SAN FRANCISCO

Determinants

Regulation: Assembly Bill 1103, buildings >5,000 sq. ft. must use Energy Star Portfolio Manager; Existing Comm’l Buildings Energy Performance Ordinance, >10,000 sq. ft. report Energy Star, ASHRAE level 1-2 audits; Green Building Ordinance, 5-25,000 sq. ft. buildings use LEED Checklist; Ordinance N 88-04; Director’s Bulletin

Tenant demand: Fortune 500 HQs; global and national investment target city; technology and financial services industries

Facts

EPA ranking*: 5th

1st LEED building: 260 Townsend, Swinerton HQ

LEED EB, Gold, 2004

Interesting building: 101 California Street

12x Energy Star, LEED EB Certified and Platinum

Note: Green building adoption in percent until December 31, 2013*”Top 25 Cities with the Most ENERGY STAR Certified Buildings” 2014

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20© 2014 CBRE

#3 CHICAGO

Determinants

Regulation: Chicago Green Permit Program prioritizes permits and waives fees for projects seeking LEED; Building Energy Use Benchmarking Ordinance requires >50,000 sq. ft. projects to report Energy Star

Tenant demand: Corporate HQs; global investment target city; business services industry

Facts

EPA ranking*: 6th

1st LEED building: 111 South Wacker Drive

LEED CS, Gold, 2005

Interesting building: Union Tower

5x Energy Star, LEED EB Silver

*”Top 25 Cities with the Most ENERGY STAR Certified Buildings” 2014 Note: Green building adoption in percent until December 31, 2013

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21© 2014 CBRE

#4 HOUSTON

Determinants

Regulation: Resolution 2004-15, city-owned buildings >10,000 sq. ft. target LEED Silver

Tenant demand: Oil & gas industry offsetting environmental risk; corporate HQ’s

Facts

EPA ranking*: 10th

1st LEED building: Kirksey Corporate Office Building

LEED EB, 2006

Interesting building: Three Allen Center

5x Energy Star, LEED EB Gold

*”Top 25 Cities with the Most ENERGY STAR Certified Buildings” 2014 Note: Green building adoption in percent until December 31, 2013

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22© 2014 CBRE

#5 ATLANTA

Determinants

Regulation: City funded projects > 5,000 sq. ft. or $2M to be LEED Silver; exemptions follow LEED checklist

Tenant demand: Fortune 500 and other high-profile companies; insurance industry

Facts

EPA ranking*: 3rd

1st LEED building: Arthur M. Blank Family Office

LEED Gold, 2004

Interesting building: Northcreek Office Park Building

20x Energy Star, LEED EB

*”Top 25 Cities with the Most ENERGY STAR Certified Buildings” 2014 Note: Green building adoption in percent until December 31, 2013

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23© 2014 CBRE

#29 KANSAS CITY

Determinants

Regulation: Ordinance 110235, all new municipal buildings >5,000 sq. ft. earn LEED Gold

Tenant demand: Lacks sustainably-oriented industries like technology, life sciences, creative industries and government

Facts

EPA ranking*: not ranked

1st LEED building: EcoWorks at Southlake Phase One

LEED NC, 2002

Interesting building: Lighton Plaza and Tower

5x Energy Star, 2x LEED EB Silver

*”Top 25 Cities with the Most ENERGY STAR Certified Buildings” 2014 Note: Green building adoption in percent until December 31, 2013

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24© 2014 CBRE

#30 PITTSBURGH

Determinants

Regulation: All Tax Increment Financing and new construction on municipal property ≥10,000 sq. ft. or >$2M must be LEED Silver. Sustainable Development Bonus, 20% density and height bonus for LEED NC or CS certification

Tenant demand: Small technology and creative industry presence; lacks other sustainably-oriented industries

Facts

EPA ranking*: not ranked

1st LEED building: PNC Firstside Center

LEED Silver, 2000

Interesting building: 525 William Penn Place

5x Energy Star, LEED EB

*”Top 25 Cities with the Most ENERGY STAR Certified Buildings” 2014 Note: Green building adoption in percent until December 31, 2013

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25© 2014 CBRE

Large geographic variation in adoption of LEED and Energy Star Minneapolis, San Francisco and Chicago are leading

Pittsburgh, Kansas City and Detroit display lowest adoption

Green-certified buildings represent a major share of the office market 13% of office buildings hold a certification compared to just 1.5% in 2005

39% of the stock of office space certified compared to less than 6% in 2005

Technology seems to diffuse faster in larger buildings

Some markets may have reached a saturation point

Markets with overall low adoption show promising growth in adoption of certification for new construction

TAKEAWAYSUnderstanding the supply of green building space

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26© 2014 CBRE

Study updated annually

Focus on impacts of:

City/state disclosure rules

Tougher LEED EB IV standards

Updated 2012 EPA Energy Star CBECS data on scores and certification level

Correlate with rents, occupancy and asset value

Update 2007/2010 research

Focus on performance attribution

WHAT’S NEXT?

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27© 2014 CBRE

THE GREEN BUILDING ADOPTION INDEXQ & A