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CoStar study finds Green buildings outperform peers
This article was originally published in http://greensuite.typepad.com/greensuite/green_roi/
Note: This article is based on American data however the market in Australia is very similar.
Demand in Marketplace for Sustainability Creates Higher Occupancy Rates, Stronger Rents and Sale Prices in 'Green' Buildings.
In America a
new study by CoStar Group has found that sustainable "green" buildings
outperform their peer non-green assets in key areas such as occupancy,
sale price and rental rates, sometimes by wide margins.
The results indicate a broader demand by property investors and tenants for buildings that have earned either LEED® certification or the Energy Star® label (similar to a NABERS classification in Australia) and strengthen the "business case" for green buildings, which
proponents have increasingly cast as financially sound investments.
According
to the study, LEED buildings command rent premiums of $11.24 per square
foot over their non-LEED peers and have 3.8 percent higher occupancy.
Rental rates in Energy Star buildings represent a $2.38 per square foot
premium over comparable non-Energy Star buildings and have 3.6 percent
higher occupancy.
And, in a trend that could signal greater
attention from institutional investors, Energy Star buildings are
selling for an average of $61 per square foot more than their peers,
while LEED buildings command a remarkable $171 more per square foot.
Andrew
Florance, president and CEO of CoStar, called the findings a "strong
economic case for developing green buildings" at a seminar hosted by
the District of Columbia Building Industry Association (DCBIA) where he
presented results from the study this month.
"The information
we've discovered is very compelling. Like all good science, we
discovered it by accident," Florance said. "Green buildings are clearly
achieving higher rents and higher occupancy, they have lower operating
costs, and they're achieving higher sale prices."
Florance
conducted the study with Jay Spivey, CoStar's director of analytics,
and Dr. Norm Miller of the Burnham-Moores Center for Real Estate at the
University of San Diego. The group analyzed more than 1,300 LEED and
Energy Star buildings representing about 351 million square feet in
CoStar's commercial property database of roughly 44 billion square
feet, and assessed those buildings against non-green properties with
similar size, location, class, tenancy and year-built characteristics
to generate the results.
"We wanted to take each and every one
of these green buildings in our database and compare them to the
buildings they directly compete with in the submarket," Florance said
at the seminar.
One factor for the "green" premiums would
appear to be the constricted supply of green buildings, which account
for just a fraction of the total U.S. building stock (less than 1
percent of space in CoStar's database.) The study indicates that while
the number of LEED-certified and Energy Star buildings continues to
grow, the supply has not kept pace with demand.
CoStar began
tagging green buildings in its database about two years ago with the
help of the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC), the nonprofit trade
group that created the LEED certification system, and the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), which administers the
government-sanctioned Energy Star label.
Although often lumped
together under the ‘green building' moniker, LEED and Energy Star
address distinct -- if not related -- goals.
LEED, which
stands for Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design, indicates a
property's overall sustainability by awarding points for just about any
sustainable feature imaginable, from bike racks and rainwater
collection and reuse systems, to energy-efficient lighting and low-flow
plumbing fixtures. It is comprised of specific programs tailored for
new buildings, existing buildings and tenant build-outs, and awards
different tiers of certification such as Silver, Gold or Platinum, the
highest.
Over the past few years, LEED has emerged as the
industry's de facto sustainable property rating system and become
nearly synonymous with the term 'green building'. So much so, "There's
a bit of urgency now that the value of buildings could be affected if
they are not LEED-certified," says Mark Bennett, a senior attorney with
law firm Miller Canfield who specializes in green building and climate
change issues.
Bennett recently chaired the National Green
Building Finance and Investment Forum, a conference involving financial
sector and property investment leaders in San Francisco, where he says
LEED was a matter of discussion for many of the nation's top
institutional investors. "In large part, they were referring to LEED
certification as a component in the definition of a Class A office
building," he said. "They basically said, 'If you're building today
without LEED, you're building in obsolescence.' "
Many would
pitch the same argument for EPA's Energy Star program, an
energy-benchmarking tool and a flag for the nation's most
energy-efficient properties. The program bypasses the bells and
whistles of LEED by targeting simpler strategies such as installing
energy efficient windows, turning off computers at night and adding
motion sensors to control lighting, to great effect: buildings that
have earned the Energy Star label use an average of almost 40 percent
less energy than average buildings, and emit 35 percent less carbon.
In
fact, according to EPA, as many as 500 buildings out of the 4,100 or so
total commercial buildings that have earned Energy Star use a full 50
percent less energy than average buildings. And many of those
efficiency practices, such as upgrading light bulbs or office
equipment, pay for themselves in energy cost savings.
On top
of that, premiums that the market is willing to pay for Energy Star
buildings, as indicated in the CoStar study, are a clear demonstration
of the overall impact of energy efficiency on property value, says
Stuart Brodsky, national program manager for the Commercial Properties
division of Energy Star.
"The business case for energy
efficiency is indisputable," Brodsky told CoStar. "The business case is
so strong that the financial results can be applied to asset value,
through increased NOI [net operating income], or leveraged to pursue
other aspects of green buildings that do not show as strong of a
financial rate of return."
But the benefit of Energy Star
extends beyond asset value. Aside from the actual Energy Star
designation, which owners may choose to pursue by demonstrating energy
reductions, the program also serves as a stand-alone energy
benchmarking tool: an energy report card, so to speak, and the type of
environmental transparency in the industry Florance has routinely
called for.
"For a lot of people, it's where the rubber meets
the road," Brodsky says of the benchmarking aspect, which saw
participation jump by more than 175 percent from 2006 to 2007. To date,
almost 8 billion square feet of U.S. property has been benchmarked
through Energy Star.
One sharp contrast between Energy Star
and LEED is where the responsibility for implementation falls. With
LEED, where three-fourths of all certified projects to date fall under
the program's flagship brand -- LEED for New Construction (LEED-NC) --
the burden for certification is largely on architects and engineers at
the design stage.
But with Energy Star, which looks
exclusively at energy consumption in existing assets, responsibility
shifts to property managers. Demand for Energy Star buildings is a
"quantifiable indicator of superior management practices across the
property, which may otherwise be intangible," Brodsky says.
Other
contrasts are closer to the surface. Energy Star is often seen as just
one piece of the sustainability puzzle, while LEED buildings,
especially those certified under LEED-NC, don't always correlate to
high levels of energy efficiency (USGBC has, perhaps in response,
re-tooled its building operations platform, LEED for Existing Buildings
(LEED-EB)).
But in many ways, those differences have benefited
both programs, allowing them to serve the same customers without
becoming direct competitors. Several big commercial real estate service
providers, including CB Richard Ellis and Transwestern, run Energy Star
and LEED programs concurrently across their managed portfolios.
So
does Kennedy Associates Real Estate Counsel LP, an Energy Star partner
since 2005 and one of only a handful of U.S. institutional investment
advisors recognized as an early adopter of green strategies.
"We
think of Energy Star and LEED in concert with each other," says Bob
Ratliffe, an executive vice president of portfolio management with the
Seattle-based firm, which also has broad development operations. "LEED
and Energy Star come up in every investment we make, they come up in
the investment committee, they come up in asset management committee
meetings. Both are part of our fabric."
Under its Responsible
Property Investing (RPI) platform, which promotes energy conservation,
sustainable development and responsible contracting across its
portfolio of more than $9 billion in assets under management, Kennedy's
LEED and Energy Star activities are extensive. It has about $325
million in LEED-certified assets, as well as another pool of buildings
valued at around $1.5 billion that are either pre-certified for LEED or
planned for certification. In addition, the firm recently identified
more than 45 office buildings for enrollment in the LEED-EB portfolio
pilot program.
Its portfolio also includes 35 Energy
Star-labeled buildings, a number that includes more than 60 percent of
all Energy Star-labeled warehouse facilities to date. The firm's
benchmarking efforts currently include more than 160 buildings totaling
22 million square feet of office and industrial space.
Kennedy
says it sees higher occupancy and rent rates, as well as quicker
lease-up and better tenant retention, in its LEED and Energy Star
buildings due to a number of factors, including market demand. "If we
lease buildings faster and hang on to tenants longer, that adds to the
economic equation," says Preston Sargent, an executive vice president
and principal with Kennedy who oversees the firm's largest client, the
Multi-Employer Property Trust (MEPT).
"And obviously, if you're selling a building at a lower cap rate, that's additional icing on the cake," he said.
But
the benefits extend beyond that, Ratliffe says. "Our investors
recognize we are a national leader in [sustainability] and put a value
on that. And as they assess their advisors, they see the leadership
we're taking in RPI and give us points, if you will, as they assess us
amongst our competitors. And that's good for business," he said.
In
large part, Kennedy is able to balance Energy Star and LEED because the
programs fit well with each other. "They're complementary," says
Christian Gunter, a LEED-Accredited Professional and assistant vice
president of Kennedy's RPI program, who points out that LEED-EB
buildings must achieve a certain Energy Star score as a prerequisite
for certification.
"In a recessionary environment there's more
than one way to cut costs," Ratliffe says, referring to the energy and
operational efficiencies emphasized under Energy Star and LEED-EB.
"It's not just cutting employees."
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