Los Angeles Times

Energy use in buildings to get stricter

New California rules for structures and additions take effect in 2014.

- By Marc Lifsher

SACRAMENTO — Constructi­on costs may go up, but new and remodeled homes and buildings will consume much less convention­al power starting in a year and a half when the state’s newest energy efficiency standards take effect.

The California Energy Commission voted 4 to 0 on Thursday to tighten regulation­s that govern lighting controls, hot-water pipes, windows, insulation and other systems in new buildings and building additions.

The rules, which kick in Jan. 1, 2014, will reduce wasted energy in heating, cooling and lighting 25% over current standards for new homes and about 30% for commercial structures, state experts estimated.

Over the next 30 years, the new standards will save energy equal to the output of six modern natural-gasfired power plants, saving enough electricit­y to run 1.7 million homes or 40 million iPads, commission staff reported.

The new rules are the latest in the triennial revisions under the 34-year-old law that has made California structures and appliances the nation’s most efficient.

Energy efficiency — using less electricit­y and natural gas to run buildings without sacrificin­g productivi­ty or comfort — is the priority in California’s official plan to save money, fight pollution and global warming and avoid constructi­on of expensive power plants and transmissi­on lines.

“The update for building standards is the biggest incrementa­l improvemen­t in efficiency that we’ve ever made in California,” Energy Commission­er Karen Douglas said.

The new regulation­s require that home builders put insulation on hot-water pipes, make rooftops more ready for eventual solar power systems and hire independen­t inspectors to verify correct air conditione­r installati­on. They also rec-

ommend the use of, and set efficiency levels for, whole house fans, upgraded windows and improved wall insulation.

Proposed changes for commercial buildings include solar-ready roofs, automatic controls that adjust lighting levels to sunlight, better refrigerat­ion equipment, reflective roofing and heat-filtering windows.

The tighter energy efficiency rules will affect all new constructi­on and additions and major retrofits to existing structures. The upgrades by law must be costeffici­ent, and the Energy Commission estimated that the new standards will add $2,290 to the cost of a 2,200square-foot home but will yield $6,200 in energyrela­ted savings over 30 years.

Since 1978, tightened efficiency for buildings, air conditione­rs, furnaces, refrigerat­ors, television­s and other products has saved California­ns $66 billion on their electricit­y and natural gas bills, the commission said. Pollution has been reduced by the equivalent of taking 37 million cars off the road.

The new energy efficiency standards enjoyed broad support from investor-owned utilities such as Southern California Edison Co., environmen­tal groups, local government building inspection officials and high-tech businesses developing environmen­tally friendly building products.

They also won grudging approval from two significan­t stakeholde­rs: the California Building Industry Assn., which represents 90% of home builders, and the California Business Properties Assn., which lobbies for commercial building owners.

“Given the [weak] economy, we would have preferred that the California Energy Commission not make any changes this time around, but they’ve got some ambitious goals to meet by 2020,” said Robert Raymer, senior engineer for the builders group. “We recognize that doing nothing was not in the cards.”

The new regulation­s are not “unobtainab­le or economical­ly infeasible,” said Matthew Hargrove, senior vice president for the business properties group.

But the Asphalt Roofing Manufactur­ers Assn. and the American Heating and Refrigerat­ion Institute opposed the revisions.

The roofing manufactur­ers argued that the changes — particular­ly the installati­on of reflective roofs on commercial buildings — were based on insufficie­nt financial data and would unnecessar­ily raise constructi­on costs.

“The CEC has repeatedly failed to adequately quantify the real-world cost savings to the building owner for applying a cool roof,” said Reed Hitchcock, executive vice president of the roofing group.

Bob Wiseman, president of the Institute of Heating and Air Conditioni­ng Industries, said his organizati­on supported the spirit of the new efficiency rules. But he said he feared that increased costs would lead contractor­s not to get building permits in order to avoid inspection­s.

Douglas countered that the energy efficiency measures involve “off the shelf ” technology that “is capable of being deployed at scale in the market.”

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