Real estate sector rallies behind Energy Star

Why Trump wants to ditch it |
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Today's newsletter looks at how real estate professionals are rallying behind Energy Star. You can read and share the whole story on Bloomberg.com. For unlimited access to climate and energy news, please subscribe.  

Building owners don't want the EPA to ditch Energy Star

By Olivia Raimonde

Energy Star — best known for its bright blue-and-white logo — saves homeowners billions of dollars every year in energy costs. But it includes another key feature widely used by commercial real estate to gauge energy use from buildings, a main source of greenhouse gas emissions in cities.

Property owners and advocates are fretting over its possible demise under the Trump administration. 

Photographer: Amir Hamja/Bloomberg

Over 330,000 buildings across the country, representing nearly 25% of commercial building space, use Portfolio Manager — a software tool within the federal government's Energy Star program. It allows owners to tally energy consumption across properties and spot inefficient buildings in need of upgrades. In the last year, Portfolio Manager helped businesses and organizations avoid $14 billion in energy costs.

"This is a business case for us," says Duane Desiderio, counsel at The Real Estate Roundtable, a Washington-based nonprofit advocacy group for the real estate industry. "It allows us to monetize how much energy we are saving. It translates to dollars." 

The software is currently a free service and Energy Star is a joint program of the Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of Energy, administered by the EPA. But now Republicans are considering axing its funding  and potentially privatizing it as they seek to decrease government spending. 

Heating, cooling and lighting buildings is responsible for 26% of global emissions, according to the International Energy Agency, and in New York City, buildings are the largest source of emissions by far.

Portfolio Manager, which has been around since 2000, allows businesses to track, measure and compare energy efficiency across hundreds of thousands of buildings all over the county. In addition to helping them make decisions on where to invest on energy-saving upgrades, owners can use it to generate reports and to ensure they're complying with local mandates for energy use disclosure. 

A preliminary version of the 2026 federal budget proposal released in May doesn't call out Energy Star and its portfolio manager software program by name, but it suggests eliminating funding for the EPA's Office of Atmospheric Protection, which Energy Star falls under.

Lee Zeldin Photographer: Kent Nishimura/Bloomberg

Lee Zeldin, administrator of the EPA, in congressional testimony in May suggested his agency or the administration could privatize the program, which costs the government tens of millions of dollars a year. 

"I have actually had multiple entities reach out to EPA over the course of the last few weeks because they want to take over Energy Star, which is a program that requires a big staff, a big taxpayer-funded staff, and a whole lot of tax dollars," he said.

But some lawmakers and stakeholders, including The Real Estate Roundtable, say the administration would need to go through Congress to kill the program. The EPA declined to comment. The Energy Department and Office of Management and Budget did not respond to requests for comment. 

Advocates working to save the software say stakeholders value it because it's free, public and used across the whole industry.

"It's really important to have a single source of truth that is trusted, third-party, government-backed," says Alex Dews, chief executive officer of the Institute for Market Transformation, a nonprofit that promotes energy-efficient buildings.

Because it's objective  and "science-based," "no one has ever perceived it as biased," says Dana Robbins Schneider, director of energy and sustainability at Empire State Realty Trust. 

Read the full story on Bloomberg.com. 

Return on investment

$350
The savings-per-dollar-spent that Energy Star has yielded over the program's lifetime, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. 

Making buildings more efficient

"It's not something you can just snap your fingers and do, you need to have intentionality, authenticity and resources."
Joe Sumberg
Head of real estate, Galvanize Climate Solutions LLC
Galvanize plans to invest $1.85 billion in commercial real estate to improve assets' energy efficiency and boost their value. 

More from Green

The European Union and China are preparing a landmark joint statement on climate cooperation, a move that could help galvanize momentum ahead of the COP30 summit in Brazil later this year.

Top officials including Commission President Ursula, Council President Antonio Costa and China's Xi Jinping will sign the declaration in Beijing on Thursday, according to people familiar with the matter, who requested anonymity discussing private talks.

The document will likely commit both countries to further emissions cuts and to deliver their climate plans — known as nationally determined contributions — to the United Nations before November's climate summit.

The announcement is significant in the wake of US President Donald Trump's decision to pull the world's largest historical emitter out of the landmark 2015 Paris Agreement, which committed countries to keeping global warming below 2°C and ideally 1.5°C.

Similar accords between the US and China were pivotal in the past. That includes the Sunnylands Agreement, which helped pave the way to a landmark commitment to transition away from fossil fuels at COP28 summit in Dubai.

Read the full story on Bloomberg.com. 

Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, right, and Xi Jinping, China's president, left. Photographer: Nathan Laine/Bloomberg

The US Environmental Protection Agency is considering scrapping a landmark almost two-decade old legal opinion that greenhouse gas emissions are harmful to human health, the Washington Post reported.

Formula 1 has seen its CO2 emissions drop 26% since 2018, with its carbon footprint falling to 168,720 metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent. A major factor in the reductions has been a years-long shift to renewable energy, the organization said.

China's solar installations were down 85% in June, from a record 93 gigawatts in May, after new rules came into effect that threaten the profitability of renewable power projects. 

Worth a listen

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act cuts almost $500 billion in US clean-energy spending, just as the country was starting to get serious about its climate goals. Some say the country is acting like a petrostate, waging war against clean energy. Others are more sanguine and believe that the US will stay the course in the long term. 

On the latest episode of Zero, Akshat Rathi is joined by Jigar Shah, a clean energy expert and former head of the Department of Energy's Loan Programs Office, to make sense of the bill's impacts, and whether it's as bad for climate as it seems. Listen now, and subscribe on AppleSpotify, or YouTube to get new episodes of Zero every Thursday.

Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg

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