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Corporate Social Responsibility
News
3.29.2006 ET
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Top Global Companies join with WBCSD to Make Energy Self-Sufficient Buildings a Reality
(CSRwire) Geneva- The World Business Council for Sustainable Development
announced today that it is forming an alliance of leading global companies
to determine how buildings can be designed and constructed so that they use
no energy from external power grids, are carbon neutral, and can be built
and operated at fair market values.
The industry effort is led by United Technologies Corp. (NYSE:UTX), the
world's largest supplier of capital goods including elevators,
cooling/heating and on-site power systems to the commercial building
industry, and Lafarge Group (NYSE: LR , Euronext: LG), the world leader in
building materials including cement, concrete, aggregates, gypsum and
roofing. The WBCSD and the two lead companies are in discussions with many
other leading global companies that are expected to join the project and
will be announced shortly.
Buildings today account for 40 percent of energy consumption in developed
countries according to the OECD. The effort announced today for
transforming the way buildings are conceived, constructed, operated and
dismantled has ambitious targets: By 2050 new buildings will consume zero
net energy from external power supplies and produce zero net carbon
dioxide emissions while being economically viable to construct and
operate.
Constructing buildings that use no net energy from power grids will
require a combination of onsite power generation and ultra-efficient
building materials and equipment.
The project will comprise three phases, each producing reports that
together will form a roadmap to transform the building industry. The first
report will document existing green building successes and setbacks, the
second will identify the full range of present and future opportunities,
and the third will present a unified industry strategy for realizing those
opportunities by 2050, specifically in China, India, Brazil, the U.S. and
the E.U.
Each report will take one year to complete and involve hearings and
conferences with building contractors and suppliers, sustainability
experts, government representatives, regulators, utility officials and
others.
"Green" buildings already are erected in various parts of the world but
current cost structure prevents widespread adoption by general
contractors. The project will build on these examples, aligning costs and
benefits in the building equation and by working in close collaboration
with architects, builders, suppliers and building owners to promote a more
sustainable approach to construction. Existing standards for energy
efficiency in buildings will be the starting point for the industry-led
alliance.
"Lafarge has been leading efforts in energy efficiency and sustainable
construction in the building materials sector for a number of years, not
only by reducing greenhouse gas emissions during the production process
but also by developing materials that contribute to making buildings more
energy efficient," said Bertrand Collomb, Chairman of Lafarge.
"In this context, Lafarge has been collaborating with leading architects
to promote sustainable construction as illustrated by our partnership with
French Architect Jacques Ferrier, which led to the development of the
'Hypergreen'concept: This multi-use tower building, designed for the
world's mega-cities, is highly energy self-sufficient thanks to the use of
the latest construction methods and technologies."
"Buildings of tomorrow should be self-sufficient in energy and have carbon
neutral emissions," said Jan van Dokkum, president of UTC Power, a United
Technologies company.
"This can be done by incorporating renewable energy sources into a
building's design, optimizing energy efficiency of support systems, and
taking advantage of geographic and culturally acceptable building
practices. Additionally, this aim is enhanced by using the 'cradle to
cradle' concept of producing, using and later re-using building materials.
This vision of energy and carbon neutral designs is a necessary evolution
we need to embrace to achieve sustainability for buildings."
Björn Stigson, President of the WBCSD noted that "being smarter and more
efficient about how we use energy in buildings will help us conserve
energy, reduce greenhouse gas emissions and address climate change. We
believe this initiative can provide extremely cost-effective solutions. It
will also set the course for self-sufficient and environmentally sound
buildings in which future generations will live, work and be entertained.
Our partners are industry leaders with technological expertise and
presence that no single existing organization or government could provide
on its own.
The World Business Council for Sustainable Development, based in Geneva,
is a coalition of some 190 international companies united by a shared
commitment to sustainable development via the three pillars of economic
growth, ecological balance and social progress. Its members are drawn from
more than 35 countries and 20 major industrial sectors.
United Technologies Corp., based in Hartford, Conn., USA, is a Dow Jones
Industrial company that reported $43 billion in 2005 revenues. UTC employs
approximately 220,000 people worldwide and provides high technology
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