Institutional Inefficiency
Guidelines for overcoming the market failure
that is now causing widespread energy waste
by Amory Lovins
One of the articles in Designing A Sustainable Future (IC#35) Spring 1993, Page 16
Copyright (c)1993, 1996 by Context Institute
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This article condenses highlights from a 66-page report prepared in 1992
by E SOURCE, a membership-based, energy-efficiency information service;
1050 Walnut St., Boulder, CO 80302. Non-members can order the complete report
for $250.
Amory Lovins, E SOURCE's principal technical consultant, is cofounder and
director of research for Rocky Mountain Institute
and an internationally recognized energy efficiency expert.
Buildings rarely are built to use energy efficiently, despite the sizeable
costs that inefficient designs impose on building owners, occupants, and
the utility companies that serve them.
The reasons for this massive market failure lie within the institutional
framework that shapes how buildings are and have been financed, designed,
constructed, commissioned, operated, maintained, leased, and occupied. Nearly
all of the roughly two dozen actors who play a role in this process have
perverse incentives that reward inefficient practice and penalize efficient
practice. As a result, our buildings cost more to build and operate, are
less comfortable, and use far more energy than they should. In the US alone,
and considering only space cooling and air handling, the unnecessary expenditures
made over the past several decades on space conditioning equipment and the
electricity supply infrastructure to run it total many hundreds of billions
of dollars.
The forces that created this dysfunction are legion, their effects enormous:
- Developers - typically desiring fast, cheap buildings that
favor appearance over long-term value - rarely take energy efficiency into
account. Their profits usually are based on the immediate resale value of
their buildings - not on the building's actual long-term financial performance.
Yet developers control the design choices that largely determine that performance.
- Lenders and their advisors perpetuate the use of old, inefficient,
but familiar technologies because they have neither the time nor the inclination
to study innovative designs. They are generally rewarded for closing deals
as quickly as possible, with as little controversy as possible.
- Commercial appraisers tend to know even less about energy systems,
thereby reinforcing developers' and lenders' short-term priorities. The
competitive value of energy-efficient commercial buildings is seldom reflected
in their appraised market value or in their perceptions of risk/reward ratios,
nor is it part of any current due-diligence process in commercial lending.
- Designers, architects, and engineers all too frequently work
in isolation; rarely does anyone involved in a project take the responsibility
for the entire interactive system. A building's location, footprint, height,
orientation, and relationship to existing shading often are specified before
the building architect is even hired.
Mechanical engineers - the people who design heating, ventilating, and air-conditioning
(HVAC) systems - usually are the last to be consulted. Specific design elements
are drawn up independently from other design considerations, killing the
opportunities to save labor and material costs that a coordinated design
effort can offer.
- Mechanical and electrical equipment often is grossly oversized.
Engineers, fearful of losing their jobs or being sued for underestimating
a building's particular needs, are likely to "round up" when in
doubt. Oversizing HVAC and other systems by up to tenfold is not unheard
of. Equipment oversizing is further encouraged when busy designers delegate
such decisions to manufacturers - a clear conflict of interest.
- The best designs often require an investment of time for learning
new methods or seeking out whole-system solutions. Only truly integrated
design can yield projects that are both ecologically and economically green.
Yet tightly scheduled, "just-in-time" designs assume that design
is a linear science rather than a systemic art, precluding whole-system
solutions and reducing the psychological freedom to innovate.
- To make matters worse, prevailing fee structures and bidding
systems reward obsolete rules-of-thumb and pre-packaged designs. This "catalog
engineering" is at the root of today's appallingly low mechanical-system
efficiencies. Further, these fee structures, instead of being based on the
engineer's qualifications, work record, effort or success, often are tied
to a project's cost. Project oversizing and complexity, not efficiency,
are rewarded by this percentage-of-cost fee structure. Creators of innovative,
less costly, and more efficient designs are penalized.
- Contractors, operating on a fixed budget, are rewarded for
cutting corners, not for adding value. Today's accelerated design and construction
schedules discourage the use of unfamiliar though more efficient technologies.
Expedience often leads to a divergence from blueprints, including the substitution
of sub-optimal equipment, resulting in poor building performance.
- Once a building is completed, poor operation and maintenance
often render efficiency measures useless.
- Prevailing leasing practices marginalize efficiency. Tenants
and building operators, particular those paying flat energy bills, rarely
are rewarded for energy savings. Landlords have no incentive to install
upgrades that will benefit their tenants but not themselves. Some landlords
mark up tenant utility bills, creating an incentive to oppose efficiency.
And leasing agents don't use a building's energy efficiency as a selling
point. To the contrary, higher rents fueled by higher energy bills can mean
higher commissions.
Fixing these problems is possible, practical, and rewarding. Improvements
that could pay for themselves within a few years could save upward of half
of the energy used to cool and ventilate buildings in countries like the
US, a nation whose buildings use one-third of all energy produced and two-thirds
of the electricity generated here. The US air-conditioning savings alone
could displace 200 giant power plants (two-fifths of the nation's total
generating capacity).
Doing all this requires a combination of education, incentives, and organization,
based on an understanding of each of the actors and how they interact. What
is really needed is no less than reinventing the building design process,
and with it, many current real-estate practices. Here are some suggestions
for how this might be done:
- Restructure design professionals' fees so that they are rewarded
for efficient results. One promising approach involves rebates from utilities
directly to the design team, as Ontario Hydro has already done. These can
double normal design fees and still be very cost-effective for the utility.
Another promising approach is "value-based compensation" in which
the design fee is split into a basic part and an incentive term that rewards
the designer for cutting energy cost or total life-cycle cost.
- Re-integrate the now dis-integrated design process.
Only a fully coordinated, multidisciplinary design team - with one person
designated as the "energy conscience" - seems capable of producing
exemplary results.
- Stage a frontal attack on the use of design rules-of-thumb
and return to classical concepts of engineering optimization. Ensure that
design and construction professionals have access to cutting-edge technologies.
- Educate developers about the effect of energy costs on project
economics, including effects on capital costs. Show developers how
lower energy costs can lower rents, giving them a competitive edge in real-estate
markets, and how advanced energy retrofits can restore distressed properties
to financial health.
- Increase energy efficiency education at universities and through
professional associations. Through industry groups and government agencies,
systematically plan and manage the flow of technology from basic R&D
through commercialization and into the marketplace.
- Encourage utility design professionals to consult with developers
before a project is built - not after - to enhance design integration.
Increase utility involvement in marketing efficient buildings and encourage
the use of "feebates," in which property owners either pay a fee
or receive a rebate depending on a building's energy efficiency.
- Improve building maintenance and operation. Enhance preventative
maintenance. Increase spending on operator training.
- Reform leasing practices to promote, not discourage, the wise
use of energy. Enable tenant and owner to benefit from energy efficiency.
Replace master meters with per-occupant meters for multiple tenancies. Provide
complete information on energy costs to tenants, landlords, and brokers.
These and related measures can do much to overcome institutional problems
and fragmentation. They can go far toward unleashing the latent creativity
of many design professionals and rewarding them for money- and energy-saving
choices. The rewards for all of us will be a substantially more efficient
and sustainable society.
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