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November 30, 2013

Tallying 2013

At the risk of trivializing Walter Benjamin's musing on world history:

Torchlight-Tallying-2013"A Klee drawing named 'Angelus Novus' shows an angel looking as though he is about to move away from something he is fixedly contemplating. His eyes are staring, his mouth is open, his wings are spread. This is how one pictures the angel of history... But a storm is blowing from Paradise; it has got caught in his wings with such violence that the angel can no longer close them. The storm irresistibly propels him into the future to which his back is turned, while the pile of debris before him grows skyward. This storm is what we call progress."

I want to report on what progress I found when looking over what Sallan readers read most in 2013. It could be that by looking back, we — readers and publisher alike — can also see ahead; at the least we can remember what we've just been through. That seems like a worthwhile effort for my final column of the year.

Readers over the year consistently clicked onto a summary of a Sallan Smart Grid conference panel that addressed concerns about cyber security back in 2010. In 2013, revelations about NSA snooping and the awareness that there is no on-line privacy, gave this item "legs" and a twist that was not apparent three years ago.

Although I don't have an angel of history handy, Sallan's Wrap Up report on "Not Your Grandma's Infrastructure" conference, held just a month before Superstorm Sandy, has become a resource in the rising advocacy for microgrids and other means to decentralize the systems that generate both heat and power in a world where climate chaos is becoming the new normal and centralized infrastructure systems, resting on century old models, have demonstrated their vulnerability, literally, to the stormy winds of history.

2013 was a good year for Sallan special reports. The Friends of Benchmarking First Year White Paper, posted in 2012 has endured as a much-read resource to advance useful knowledge for greener cities and the new Second Year White Paper is attracting reader attention. Companion resource materials, like the City's Annual Benchmarking Report, have also been consistently downloaded through the year.

Sallan's bi-monthly "Snapshot" guest columns, each with its own voice and message, are among my favorite postings. This year, Ken Levenson's update on the Passive House movement and its use of the blower test was a hit as was Chris Benedict's manifesto on how to work at the cutting edge of green, affordable urban architecture. Tom Bourgeois and Bill Pentland's deeply informed essay on New York State rule-making to encourage the development of a climate resilient distributed power supply system excavated some of the complexity entailed in modernizing a century of utility regulations. Snapshots are meant to capture moments in time for practitioners, observers and critics of today's urban sustainability campaigns. Will next year's Snapshots display continuity or ruptures with today's emerging positions and practices? Visit our website and find out.

It was also a good year for discovering what was useful knowledge for greener cities back in 2011, remains current. Site visitors are still clicking on the mini-site featuring a Wrap Up of our Market Makers panel series. The premise then, and continues to be, was that adapting New York City's legacy building stock to 21st-century requirements is the energy efficiency task before us. It is made increasingly urgent as climate change accelerates, energy debates heat up, and a volatile economy makes energy savings matter more. Not surprisingly, energy-related subjects now figure in many real estate-related plans and promotional materials.

But ideas are one thing; actionable ideas may be another. How is the market actually responding to new realities? To gauge market response, experts on energy-efficiency technologies, electric utilities, financial innovation, and real estate trends reported on their own work and shared broader insights. While my co-sponsor, Micah Kotch of NYU-ACRE and I shared the sense of momentum that panelists conveyed was palpable. We also agreed that their acknowledgement of obstacles was sobering and remains so today.

Speaking of actionable ideas, readers flocked to the Deutsche Bank Americas Foundation's nuanced report on energy retrofitting projects in New York City apartment buildings, "Recognizing the Benefits of Energy Efficiency in Multifamily Underwriting". Its goal was to encourage the financial industry to scale up financing of building energy efficiency retrofits in the belief that "private capital, if deployed for retrofits, could prove transformational in achieving significant carbon reductions while upgrading multifamily buildings and stimulating much-needed job creation." As well, readers downloaded a visionary Urban Green Council paper on paths to cutting the Big Apple's carbon footprint 90% by 2050 and Green Light New York's "Let There Be Daylight", a study of how to achieve steep and durable cuts in office tower energy consumption by capturing the power of natural illumination.

Cheers to Sallan readers and their dedication to the long form! I do hope they have found these and other cutting edge reports on the built environment, along with the challenge of shrinking the urban carbon footprint, to be useful and applicable knowledge for greener cities.

I want to thank you readers for validating my sense of having accomplished something since launching this website in 2005. Like Klee's 'Angelus Novus', you and I can only see the past while being blown by gale force winds into the future. It's the human condition. If you've found Sallan's web presence to be instructive, prescient or provocative, please visit us regularly in the New Year because it's fair to say, we're all in this together.

November 18, 2013

Notes From A Green Building Transition Talk NYC 2013

Based on the Talking Transition format of self-organizing, break-out tables with 8–10 people discussing opportunities for and obstacles facing the task of making NYC's building stock more energy efficient, here are the ideas advanced for a green, energy efficient building agenda in the de Blasio administration.

I was excited by the focused quality of engagement and civility in the Canal Street tent. Here's my takeaway done as bullet points, in keeping with the quick summaries presented by each table's reporter. I have neither prioritized participants' ideas, organized them into themes nor tried to interpret them.

My only comment is that few people at this discussion made reference to the suite of NYC's building energy efficiency laws in effect since 2009. That said, here is a sketch of what I heard on November 17.

  • The new Mayor should do a community listening tour
  • The Administration should undertake more outreach and education for tenants & landlords
  • Credit unions should be brought in as a new source for energy efficiency financing
  • More community education, adults and kids alike
  • Call for community forums on available energy efficiency techniques and methodologies. People need to learn about others' "hands on" experience. This will help reduce the fear of doing something new, unknown or being taken advantage of
  • Need a NYC master plan or zoning framework to encourage more energy efficiency
  • The public lacks useful information. Call for government outreach and targeted expediting of energy efficiency and resiliency projects. These services should be made available in local "storefronts"
  • The City should improve access to good green jobs and training
  • More access to information of building energy use tracking and comparison should be made available
  • Mayor de Blasio should undertake "boiler-side" chats
  • The City should set up energy efficiency demonstration projects
  • The new Administration should press NYS, through Public Service Commission rule-making, to go greener
  • Energy efficient new construction and rehabbing should get more access to financing
  • The City should do more education on the impact of energy efficient construction
  • Create a "hot line" for the public to access basic information on energy efficiency and access to additional information
  • The City should education the public about how energy consumption is part of every household's budget
  • Concern that there is no critical mass of voters demanding more energy efficiency
  • To add to urban resilience, the City should conduct annual disruption day events to assess every building's preparedness to face infrastructure outages and energy systems and equipment robustness
  • Improve the coordination among City agencies to deliver on building energy efficiency policies, programs and paperwork
  • Mayor de Blasio should use the "bully pulpit" power of his office to highlight building energy efficiency
  • Public engagement and information about energy efficiency is still lacking
  • Organize energy efficiency competitions to engage and motivate people
  • Promote energy efficiency literacy

As I wrote before, and will note again:

Without an alert media and a public that values these laws and the worth of cutting our carbon footprint, the truth of President Franklin D. Roosevelt's vintage observation remains evergreen. He is said to have told labor leaders who sought his support for major reforms, "I agree with you, I want to do it, now make me do it."

Now it's time for New York's citizens to make their elected officials do it.
Mayor-elect Bill deBlasio