May 25, 2007
 


AIA Leadership Pushes Congress for Carbon Neutrality:
AIA President RK Stewart, FAIA, and AIA President-elect Marshall E. Purnell, FAIA, testified last week before two committees of the U.S. House of Representatives to encourage the federal government to adopt the AIA’s 2030 goals for federal buildings. Stewart and Purnell urged Congress to set energy reduction targets for new federal buildings and buildings undergoing major renovations. If the AIA-recommended policies are adopted, they said, all federal agencies will be required to reduce significantly the amount of fossil fuel-generated energy used in the next generation of federal buildings, resulting in carbon-neutral federal buildings by the year 2030.
(Photo of Marshal Purnell, courtesy of of U.S. PIRG/Paul Carlson.)

Clinton Foundation Announces Green Building Initiative:
The Clinton Foundation recently announced a landmark partnership with 16 cities to cut carbon emissions through the renovation of city-owned buildings. “Climate change is a global problem that requires local action,” noted Bill Clinton in a press release on the program. The newly developed Energy Efficiency Building Retrofit Program will bring cities, the largest energy services companies, and five major global financial institutions together to reduce energy use in existing public buildings by 20-50 percent.

Building Design Leaders Unite on Energy Reduction Targets:
To reduce the building design industry’s impact on the environment, key leaders in that sector are collaborating to establish carbon-neutral buildings by the year 2030. The AIA; the American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE); Architecture 2030; the Illuminating Engineering Society of North America (IESNA); and the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC), supported by representatives of the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), finalized an agreement of understanding May 4 establishing a common starting point and a goal of net zero energy buildings.

For more on these stories, read the current issue of the AIA Angle.

 
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For more on these stories, read the current issue of the AIA Angle.