Urban Land Institute - August 28, 2019
A new report from the ULI Greenprint Center for Building Performance shows that the real estate industry has made significant progress over the past 10 years in reducing carbon emissions and energy consumption while increasing asset value. The Greenprint Center, which is celebrating its 10th anniversary, comprises an alliance of the world’s leading real estate owners, investors, and financial institutions that are committed to improving environmental performance across the global market.
Volume 10 of the Greenprint Performance Report™, which measures and tracks the performance of 8,916 properties owned by Greenprint’s members, demonstrates a 10-year improvement of 17 percent in energy use intensity, which is the annual energy consumption divided by gross floor area. The report also finds that Greenprint members are still on track to reduce carbon emissions by 50 percent by 2030.
“For the past 10 years, Greenprint has worked with the real estate investment community to help expand and improve upon sustainability best practices within the commercial real estate sector,” says Daniel M. Cashdan, president, HFF Securities (a JLL company) and chairman of the Center for Sustainability and Economic Performance, which houses the Greenprint Center. “As the race against climate change’s various impacts on our cities picks up, the focus of global fiduciaries has become sharpened. Greenprint, as part of our Center for Sustainability and Economic Performance, exists to serve as a resource hub for investors across the globe.”
This year, Greenprint members identified three trends that are pushing real estate companies to stay innovative and continue integrating sustainability into their core business. These trends are:
The report reflects the results of hundreds of projects and best practices that Greenprint members have undertaken to reduce energy consumption and carbon emissions. Examples include the following:
The number of properties included in this year’s report has risen by 12 percent from last year, as Greenprint continues to expand both its membership and the building data collected from members. The portfolio has also grown by 15 percent in terms of floor area, and now includes over 2 billion square feet (190 million sq m) of office, multifamily, industrial retail, and hotel property. The 8,900-plus buildings in the portfolio are located across 32 countries. Greenprint members hold over $750 billion (€674 billion) of real estate assets under management, which is almost 4 percent of the value of high-quality commercial properties globally.
“For the past 10 years, Greenprint members have led the way in making demonstrable and meaningful action to create high-efficiency buildings,”says ULI Global Chief Executive Officer W. Edward Walter. “Greenprint demonstrates how owners and developers can be part of the solution to combat climate change, and the results that Greenprint members have achieved over the past decade are inspiring a broader movement within the real estate sector to improve building performance.”
The data used in the report were submitted to the Greenprint Center by its members and affiliated partners. Greenprint’s real estate members currently include BlackRock, Boston Properties, CalPERS, CenterPoint Properties, Clarion Partners, CommonWealth Partners, DWS, GID, GLL Real Estate Partners, Granite Properties, Heitman; the Howard Hughes Corporation, Jamestown Properties, Jones Lang LaSalle, Kilroy Realty, LaSalle Investment Management, LendLease Americas, Morgan Creek Ventures LLC, Parkway Properties, PGIM Real Estate, Prologis, Rudin Management Company Inc., Savanna, SL Green, Sonae Sierra, Tishman Speyer, the Net Group, and Zurich Alternative Asset Management.
ULI members can access copies of the full report and many more at knowledge.uli.org. Registrants of the ULI Fall Meeting may wish to attend resilience related events listed here.
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