Colorado Green Building Post

March 9, 2010

Energy Efficiency Proposals Could Create 333,000 Jobs in 2010

Washington, D.C. (March 9, 2010): Proposed federal energy efficiency jobs provisions would create about 333,000 jobs in 2010 and then 184,000 jobs in 2011 as funding begins to ramp down, according to a new analysis released today by the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy (ACEEE).The proposed programs include residential and commercial retrofit programs and an energy-efficient manufacturing grant program. The Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee and a House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Energy and the Environment will be holding hearings on these issues this week.

“The energy efficiency programs in these proposals would create jobs because energy efficiency improvements are labor intensive and net job creators.These programs would produce more construction and service-sector jobs than those energy sector jobs lost from reduced energy consumption,” said Steven Nadel, ACEEE Executive Director. “In addition, these programs would continue creating small numbers of jobs even after the stimulus period is over, because energy bill savings enable consumers and businesses to spend that money elsewhere in the economy.”

Most of the products used in buildings retrofits (such as insulation and windows) are manufactured in the United States. In addition, construction jobs involved in the projects cannot be outsourced and would provide vital local jobs in communities across the country. These provisions would represent good investments in three important sectors of the U.S. economy as they focus on improving productivity; creating jobs; and leveraging government, consumer, and business funds in the best way possible.

The “Home Star” program, also known as “Cash for Caulkers,” would provide rebates for energy efficiency improvements to homeowners. Like the popular “Cash for Clunkers” program, these rebates would be provided instantly at the retail store. Customers would receive rebates for up to 50% of the project (or $1,500 per retrofit), or could upgrade a whole home with 20 percent energy savings for a $3,000 credit. In addition to reducing energy use and saving consumers money on their energy bills, ACEEE estimates that this program would create about 126,000 jobs in 2010 and then 36,000 jobs in 2011, improving up to 3 million homes at a cost of $6 billion dollars.

Commercial retrofits, also with immense potential as job creators, include the “Building Star” program introduced in legislation last week by Senators Jeff Merkley (D-OR) and Mark Pryor (D-AR). This program, estimated to create 130,000 jobs in 2010 and then 57,000 jobs in 2011, would offer businesses rebates for up to 30 percent of the cost of improvements to lighting, insulation, and energy management for commercial buildings.

The third proposal would provide $4 billion in grants to manufacturers for investments in energy efficiency and clean energy product manufacturing projects. This proposal would provide additional funding to a $156 million DOE grant program that was initiated by ARRA stimulus legislation. “DOE received applications requesting over $3.8 billion in the ARRA funds, more than 24 times the amount available,” said Neal Elliott, ACEEE Industrial Program Director. “The response demonstrates the pent-up demand for manufacturing efficiency investments. We have a large number of “shovel-ready” projects waiting at DOE for additional funding.” ACEEE estimates that the additional grant funding would create 77,000 jobs in 2010 and then 91,000 jobs in 2011 from funding the existing, unfunded applications and from a solicitation for a second round of proposals.

“These estimates of job creation are probably conservative,” concluded Nadel, “since we did not examine the impact of lower energy consumption on energy prices.When energy prices go down, money is freed up for spending in more labor-intensive parts of the economy.”

Details on ACEEE’s analyses of the proposed provisions can be found at: www.aceee.org/energy/national/potential_leg.htm.

March 5, 2010

Obama’s Green Jobs Road Tour Visits Smart Grid Tech Company

President Obama  continued to promote his jobs push and green economy goals during a press conference Friday from Opower, a smart-grid software company in Arlington, VA. He went on to announce that he has signed the latest jobs bill to extend unemployment benefits and offer tax breaks to employers who hire unemployed workers. Opower expects to hire 100 new employees this year.

Opower software helps consumers track energy use so they can mange home energy use by giving them a dashboard of energy use data. He related Opower’s work to the proposed Home Star program to spur job growth as home owners have homes upgraded with energy efficiency measures.

“The country that leads in clean energy today will lead the global economy tomorrow” said Mr. Obama.  “Lets see if we can replicate Opower’s sucess across the country.”

February 24, 2010

Home Star Will Boost Jobs Says DC Think Tank

New Report from Center for American Progress Supports Home Star Initiative:

As the nation struggles to recover from one of the worst economic recessions in decades, unemployment has recently shown some marginal improvement, falling below 10 percent in January. But for workers in the construction and construction-related manufacturing sectors, there is little relief as jobless rates remain at near-Depression levels.

 

Total construction payroll employment has fallen by 2.1 million since 2006, with residential construction jobs down 38 percent and the jobless rate among experienced construction workers stuck at nearly 25 percent. Overall manufacturing employment has dropped 16 percent since the recession began in December 2007, but for manufacturing tied to construction the numbers are far worse: 30 percent in wood products, 22 percent in items such as window glass and fiberglass insulation, and 19 percent in fabricated metals and heating, ventilating, and air conditioning equipment. With credit still tight and the housing industry still in the doldrums, waiting for market forces to spur a recovery in construction could condemn hundreds of thousands of American families to years of continued economic struggle.

Fortunately, help is on the horizon. This week a bill establishing a HOME STAR program of consumer rebates for home energy efficiency retrofits will be introduced in the Senate thanks to the leadership of Sens. Mark Warner (D-VA) and Jeff Bingaman (D-NM), among others. Concerned members of Congress, with the Obama administration’s support, have crafted an incentive program to make millions of U.S. homes more energy efficient, swiftly create 168,000 jobs in construction and manufacturing among other industries, save homeowners nearly $10 billion over a decade through lower energy costs, and make a dent in global warming pollution.

 http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2010/02/home_star_back_to_work.html

December 8, 2009

Obama Wants Energy Efficiency and Public Works for Jobs Growth

Filed under: ARRA Stimulus, Weatherizing and Retrofit — Tags: , , , — uswx @ 8:00 am

By Edwin Chen and Nicholas Johnston

Dec. 8 (Bloomberg) — President Barack Obama today will propose upgrading infrastructure, promoting home-energy efficiency and helping small businesses as ways to spur job growth, an administration official said.

The initiatives, which Obama will discuss at 11:15 a.m. today at the Brookings Institution, a Washington research institute, follow a jobs forum he hosted at the White House last week on how to bring back the more than 7.2 million jobs that have been lost since the start of the recession.

“Having finally moved into positive territory when it comes to economic growth, our biggest challenge now is making sure that job growth matches up with economic growth,” Obama told reporters at the White House yesterday.

Among the initiatives the president will discuss today are steps to help small businesses grow and hire new staff, spend to modernize roads, railways, bridges and tunnels, airports and seaports and a new program to provide rebates for consumers who retrofit their homes to become more energy efficient, the official said. The official didn’t release further details.

The president said yesterday he will look at “selective approaches” to using a portion of the $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program to spur job growth, such as opening up more credit for small- and medium-sized businesses.

The President’s Economic Recovery Advisory Board has endorsed an initiative to provide incentives for weatherizing homes, a proposal that has become known as “cash for caulkers.” The program would boost the construction industry and benefit home-improvement retailers such as Atlanta-based Home Depot Inc. and Lowe’s Cos., based in Mooresville, North Carolina.

Obama’s biggest fight may be in using money from TARP, which was created to shore up financially troubled banks. The Treasury Department has said the program will cost about $200 billion less than an earlier estimate as banks repay bailout funding.

December 7, 2009

Cash for Caulkers is Home Star

From Jared Asch at Efficiency First

Recognizing the urgent need to put millions of unemployed Americans back to work, the President’s Economic Recovery Advisory Board (PERAB) voted on Dec. 4 to endorse a smart federal program that would leverage government incentives and private investment to stimulate a massive increase in home energy retrofits nationwide. This HOME STAR program - popularly known as “Cash for Caulkers” - has the potential to jump-start our industry from the current rate of about 250,000 home retrofits per year to 5.5 million retrofits in the next two years. Imagine the impact that would have on your business - and on the Home Performance industry as a whole.

Efficiency First has been deeply involved at the highest levels in developing this plan, which would rapidly create hundreds of thousands of local jobs in construction and related industries. At every step of the way, we have injected a boots-on-the-ground perspective based on real-life experience in the field to ensure that HOME STAR will be a highly productive use of public resources. The performance-based incentive structure we have promoted rewards measurable reductions in household energy waste, and delivers a practical and cost-effective strategy for creating good long-term jobs while reducing energy bills for American homeowners.

A memo published today on the White House Web site lays out the details of the HOME STAR plan, which will require decisive action from Congress and the White House. Efficiency First and our allies are working closely to build support for the plan on Capitol Hill, and we urge all of our members to contact their representatives in the Senate and the House help us get the message across. Additional information about HOME STAR is available on our Web site including the full report for PERAB at http://www.efficiencyfirst.org/home-star/

Your participation has been instrumental in making Efficiency First a powerful voice in Washington as new policies are written that will fundamentally reshape our future. Together we are blazing a new trail for the Home Performance industry, and laying the foundation for a prosperous 21st-century American economy.

What can I do to make HOME STAR a reality? Strengthen our voice, help us recruit three new members to Efficiency First. As a larger more unified voice we stand a greater chance at making HOME STAR a reality.

November 18, 2009

Cash for Caulkers Details from the New York Times

Filed under: ARRA Stimulus, Weatherizing and Retrofit — Tags: , , , — uswx @ 5:00 am

By DAVID LEONHARDT, The New York Times

At a meeting of President Obama’s board of outside economic advisers two weeks ago, the venture capitalist John Doerr said the following:

In the very near term, the way we can generate the most jobs, we believe, is through home retrofits…. The way I like to put it is, Cash for Clunkers mobilized all of America’s car dealerships and caused change very rapidly. Well, the equivalent of that for home retrofits would be “Cash for Caulkers,” and what we would do is engage private enterprise, the likes of a Lowe’s or a Home Depot, these organizations that have tens of millions of people a week coming into their storefronts, and use that private capital to incentivize consumers to then work with our out-of-work trades - remodelers, production builders - to do this kind of work.

I wrote about “cash for caulkers” in my column this week - including some of my reservations about it. But it clearly has a lot of potential, and I didn’t have room to get into all of the details of Mr. Doerr’s proposal (which, he emphasizes, is the product of work by a lot of people - including Steve Cowell and Matt Golden). Here are the basics:

The official name of the program would be Homestar, playing off the name Energy Star, a government program that promotes energy-efficient appliances.

It would cost $23 billion over two years. Of that, $6 billion would go to incentives to people who did at least two significant weatherization projects - such as air sealing, insulation, new light bulbs and new appliances. Homestar would have a list of 10 such projects. Households that did at least two would be eligible for up to $2,000. Households that did four would be eligible for up to $3,500. The government money could not pay for more than half of any project.

Another $12 billion would be set aside for households that undertook a weatherization project that reduced energy consumption by at least 20 percent. A 20 percent reduction would bring a $4,000 subsidy. Each additional 5 percent reduction would bring another $1,500. Again, government money could not pay for more than half of any project.

Some portion of weatherization projects would be audited to ensure they had done what they were supposed to. These audits would be paid for with $2 billion for program administration.

The remaining $3 billion for the program would pay for incentives to retailers, like Home Depot and Lowe’s, and contractors. “What you want to be able to do,” Mr. Doerr said, “is walk into Sears or Home Depot and see a great big Homestar logo and a Homestar sales representative.”

November 6, 2009

President Obama Mulls Plan for 1 Million Jobs — Cash for Caulkers

Filed under: ARRA Stimulus, Weatherizing and Retrofit — Tags: , , — uswx @ 5:00 am

From Jared Asch at Efficiency First: 

In recent weeks, Efficiency First president Matt Golden has been deeply involved in the development of a proposed national incentive program for residential energy efficiency improvements that is now under consideration by President Barack Obama. The plan was conceived by an ad hoc committee of industry leaders as a way to boost consumer demand for Home Performance services and stimulate immediate job creation in the troubled construction and building materials sectors.

John Doerr of the Silicon Valley venture capital firm Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers formally presented the plan on Monday at a meeting of the President’s Economic Recovery Advisory Board (PERAB), a panel of non-governmental experts who report regularly to the White House on economic issues. “Just as the Cash for Clunkers program mobilized American car dealers to promote their fuel-efficient cars,” Doerr said, “so could a Cash for Caulkers program engage private enterprise, such as Lowe’s and Home Depot, to put private capital to work.”

The proposal calls for the creation of a performance-based incentive system to reward homeowners for implementing building upgrades that deliver significant reductions in household energy use. Unlike most existing home energy incentives, Cash for Caulkers incentives would be based on proven building science techniques and modeled energy savings rather than on specific products, and would include the cost of labor as a basis for calculating incentives for all projects.

The online news source Politics Daily reported that the president seemed receptive to the idea, telling the PERAB members that “We have brought the economy back from the brink. Now we need to focus on getting people back to work.”

As our nation struggles with a deep and growing crisis of construction-related unemployment, Efficiency First will continue to press for smart government policies and programs that will help us grow the industry and create new sustainable jobs for American workers.

Go to http://www.efficiencyfirst.org/blog/2009/11/05/obama-considers-’cash-for-caulkers’-incentive/to view a video of John Doerr’s presentation.

November 5, 2009

BPI Releases National Home Energy Audit Standard

The Building Performance Institute, Inc. (BPI) announced its new Home Energy Auditing (EA) Standard, now available for public comment.  Created by BPI’s Standards Technical Committee, the new standard provides guidance for professionals conducting residential energy audits.  This standard includes recommendations for energy efficiency improvements for single-family and multifamily residential buildings.  Energy Conservation Measures (ECMs) are key components of the standard.

Significant elements of this new standard include:

Cost-benefit analyses of ECMs, using predictive computer software with housing stock, current energy prices, seasonal/baseload measures and type of housing

Work scope evaluations of the whole house to cost-effectively optimize home performance, while maintaining or improving health, safety and customer objectives

Specifications for: combustion appliance and carbon monoxide testing, controlled ventilation requirements, moisture control, building enclosure performance and HVAC efficiency

Larry Zarker, CEO of BPI, said “This new standard - especially when applied as part of a weatherization assistance program or funded energy efficiency retrofit program that requires test-in/test-out verification of ECM performance - will ensure BPI’s energy auditors provide high-quality home performance energy improvements that conform to program requirements and homeowner expectations.  It will serve as a model throughout the industry.”

 

John Krigger, Chairman of BPI’s Standards Technical Committee and a nationally recognized expert in the field of energy conservation states, “BPI is well positioned to lead the growth of residential energy savings in America.  Their Home Energy Auditing Standard is a vital combination of energy and cost saving elements and incorporates homeowner safety with comfort and health.  Their standards will serve as the guideline for properly retrofitting homes using a whole-house approach.”

October 19, 2009

Biden Announces Retrofit Greenprint for Creating Jobs

Vice President Joe Biden announced the relase of a new report titled Recovery Through Retrofit that focuses on removing barriers to improving the energy efficiency of existing homes to reduce carbon output and create jobs for the US economy.

Download the report at: http://www.whitehouse.gov/assets/documents/Recovery_Through_Retrofit_Final_Report.pdf

The report highlights the immense opportunity to create good jobs while reducing greenhouse gases by reducing the barriers to home energy retrofits. It proposes increasing the use of Property Assesed financing of retrofits (PACE), increased support for Energy Efficient Mortgages and Expanding Revolving Loan Funds. Also, the report calls for increased access to consumer information about energy efficency retrofitting and performance and training standards for contractors.

“With 130 million homes in the US generating more than 20% of  our nation’s carbon dioxide emissions, there’s plenty of work to go around,” said Biden during the announcement today.

October 14, 2009

Veterans Green Jobs Lands Weatherization in San Luis Valley

Filed under: ARRA Stimulus, New — Tags: , , — uswx @ 10:33 pm

Veterans Green Jobs will provide weatherization services in Saguache, Mineral, Rio Grande, Alamosa, Conejos and Costilla counties. The $1.1 million contract runs through June 30, 2010, and calls for Veterans Green Jobs to weatherize and improve efficiencies in 240 homes.

The Colorado based non-profit has been training veterans for green jobs at  the National Renewable Energy Lab in Golden. The group is planning to establish a national training center to expand its program.

“We are honored to have the opportunity to provide weatherization services for the residents of the San Luis Valley,” said Brett KenCairn, CEO of Veterans Green Jobs. “Veterans Green Jobs is also excited to incorporate the dedicated Valley residents who have been previously providing these services.

“I am tremendously pleased to see Veterans Green Jobs being named the weatherization provider for the San Luis Valley,” said state Sen. Gail Schwartz, who serves on the Veterans Green Jobs board and whose district includes much of the San Luis Valley. “Veterans Green Jobs is the embodiment of three issues that I am firmly committed to: supporting our veterans as they return home, promoting job growth in the clean energy industry and working toward American energy independence.”

The Governor’s Energy Office, through 11 local partners - including Veterans Green Jobs - is significantly expanding its weatherization services to income-qualified households under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.

With nearly $80 million in additional funding provided over three years, Colorado plans to weatherize more than 10,000 homes, cutting utility bills for low-income families, reducing pollution and adding jobs across the state.

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