Governor Schwarzenegger announces First-in-the-Nation
Statewide Green Building Standards Code
GLOBE-Net (January 14, 2010) -The California
Building Standards Commission has unanimously adopted the
first-in-the-nation mandatory Green Building Standards Code
(CALGREEN) requiring all new buildings in the state to be more
energy efficient and environmentally responsible.
Taking effect on January 1, 2011, these comprehensive
regulations will achieve major reductions in greenhouse gas
emissions, energy consumption and water use to create a greener
California.
CALGREEN will require that every new building constructed in
California reduce water consumption by 20 percent, divert 50
percent of construction waste from landfills and install low
pollutant-emitting materials.
"The code will help us meet our goals of curbing
global warming and achieving 33 percent renewable energy by 2020
and promotes the development of more sustainable communities by
reducing greenhouse gas emissions and improving energy efficiency
in every new home, office building or public structure."
Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger
It also requires separate water meters for nonresidential
buildings' indoor and outdoor water use, with a requirement for
moisture-sensing irrigation systems for larger landscape projects
and mandatory inspections of energy systems (e.g., heat furnace,
air conditioner and mechanical equipment) for nonresidential
buildings over 10,000 square feet to ensure that all are working at
their maximum capacity and according to their design
efficiencies.
The California Air Resources Board estimates that the mandatory
provisions will reduce greenhouse gas emissions (CO2 equivalent) by
3 million metric tons equivalent in 2020.
Upon passing state building inspection, California's property
owners will have the ability to label their facilities as CALGREEN
compliant without using additional costly third-party certification
programs.
The mandatory code provisions will now become the baseline of
regulated green construction practices in the country's most
populous state. The BSC, which developed this initial Green
Building Standards Code with extensive discussions with
environmentalists, architects, builders, local officials and
others, will continue to improve this new code with those
interested parties.
In addition to the mandatory regulations, CALGREEN also includes
more stringent voluntary provisions to encourage local communities
to take further action to green their buildings to reduce
greenhouse gas emissions, improve energy efficiency and conserve
our natural resources.
Click here for additional information about
CALGREEN.