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The Economics of Green Buildings

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General assumptions made by contemporary (neoclassical) economics ... The Science and Management of Sustainability, Columbia University Press, 1991, 3 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Economics of Green Buildings


1
The Economics of Green Buildings
  • Lecture 7

2
Overview
  • General assumptions made by contemporary
    (neoclassical) economics
  • A new field of economics ecological economics
  • Applications to the built environment
  • Life Cycle Costing (LCC) approach

3
Neoclassic Economics
  • Nature is a sector of the economy
  • Nature does not support the economy, but it
    simply is a sector of it
  • Economy will grow around / develop / evolve to
    overcome any scarcity that may develop based on
    nature
  • Unimportance of Nature

4
Prevailing Economic System
  • Private ownership of material resources
  • Public ownership of sinks
  • Perfect functioning of the market
  • Infinite substitutability of resources
  • Subsidized disposal, energy, water

5
Economy
The ecosystem is seen sector of the Economy
Ecosystem
6
(No Transcript)
7
Environmental Economics
  • Three steps
  • assessing the economic importance of
    environmental degradation
  • finding the economic causes of degradation
  • designing economic incentives to slow, halt, and
    reverse environmental degradation
  • Assumption the environment is not a separate
    entity from the economy
  • Environmental changes have economic impact

8
Ecological Economics
  • A new transdisciplinary field addressing the
    relationship between ecosystems and economic
    systems in the broadest sense.
  • Uses the tools of conventional economics and
    ecology as appropriate.
  • Need to establish institutions that take the long
    term view, a la biology
  • Economics as an ecological system

R. Costanza, Ed. Ecological Economics, The
Science and Management of Sustainability,
Columbia University Press, 1991, 3-7.
9
Hicksian Income
...income that can be consumed without reducing
future consumption possibilities
Hicksian Income income that does not forego
future opportunities for others.
10
Sustainable Economic System
  • Understands primary role of natural systems in
    the economy
  • Integrates functions of industrial and natural
    ecologies
  • Accounts for true costs of waste and disposal
  • Cradle-to-Grave responsibility for products
  • Penalizes waste, rewards efficiency
  • Understands that everything is connected

11
Current vs. Ecological Summary
  • The current economic system is not sustainable
  • Depends on the scale of material/energy
    throughput
  • Subsidizes resource extraction and pollution
  • Taxes productive activities
  • Does not measure welfare
  • A system based on Ecological Economics would
  • Shift taxes to waste, inefficiency, and
    pollution, away from wages, profits,
    productivity, and investment
  • Focus on dematerialization, deenergization,
    decarbonization, and detoxification
  • Measure welfare instead of absolute monetary
    transactions
  • Support an EcoIndustrial revolution

12
Changing the Signals to the Economy
  • Currently taxes are applied to positive aspects
    of behavior wages, productivity, profit
  • It would be better to tax aspects that are
    negative waste, inefficiency, pollution
  • Possible mechanisms
  • Pollution taxes
  • Tradable pollution permits
  • Deposit fees
  • Shifting impacts of production to producers is
    called internalization
  • Internalize the Externalities polluter pays

13
Assessing Building Economics
  • Depends on the owner private or public
  • Speculative buildings minimize capital or
    first cost of the building
  • Commercial owner minimize capital costs, some
    consideration of operating costs, issue is length
    of ownership
  • Federal government minimize sum of capital and
    operating costs
  • The economics of green building is predicated on
    minimizing the total cost of the building over
    its life cycle Life Cycle Costing (LCC)

14
Considering the Environment Integrated Decision
Making
  • Since Financial and Economic Analysis are
    conducted in terms of money, environmental
    considerations must be somehow turned into
    monetary items
  • Analysis Options
  • 1. Omit environmental considerations
  • 2. Recognize them but do not integrate them into
    the decision
  • 3. Describe them list with appropriate
    monetary values
  • 4. Qualitative Comparison describe and compare
    monetary and non monetary effects
  • 5. Quantitative Non-monetary assessment assess
    and record effects in non monetary units
  • 6. Quantitative monetary assessment Evaluate
    in money terms and integrate into decision

15
Wild Card IEQ
  • Indoor Environmental Quality (IEQ) comfort, air
    quality, lighting, noise, connection to nature
  • Cost of building lease 22/SF
  • Cost of employee (typical) 124
  • Benefit of healthy building 12/SF (assumes a
    10 productivity increase)
  • Note for Federal government 350/SF

16
Perceived High Cost
  • It cost more to buy / use that
  • Initial Cost
  • Life Cycle Cost
  • Cradle to Cradle
  • Cradle to Grave
  • Full Cost Accounting
  • Embodied Energy - subjective

17
Life Cycle Costing
  • Life Cycle Costing (LCC) is used to determine the
    total cost of a building for the purpose of
    selecting alternatives
  • LCC adds together the construction or capital
    or first cost of a building to the total
    operating costs
  • Operating costs could include
  • Energy electricity, natural gas, fuel oil, other
  • Water and wastewater
  • Maintenance function of quality, durability,
    complexity
  • Total cost of people in building

18
LCC Process
  • Determine the building lifetime discount rate
  • Estimate the capital cost for construction
  • Run simulation to determine operating costs
    (typically energy, can include water, wastewater
    treatment, maintenance, IEQ impacts)
  • Determine annual building cost
  • Amortize capital cost over building lifetime or
    other period of time
  • Input operating costs and adjust for inflation
  • Sum amortized capital cost and operating costs
    for each year
  • Use discount rate to determine the present worth
    of annual costs

19
Discount Rates
  • Used in economic analysis and LCC
  • Discount rate if the alternative investment
  • The discount rate is the way society views the
    future
  • The higher the discount rate, the lower will be
    the worth of future savings or earnings

20
Discount Rate Formula
2,051.10
21
Discount Rate Formula
10,000.00
2,051.10
i 8
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
years
22
Inflation Rate Formula
Cost of a 200 item in 10 years if the annual
inflation rate is 3
23
LCC Tableau
(1) Net Annual Savings Savings Costs Net
Annual SavingsEnergy SavingsLoan OM
Misc (2) PW of Savings Net Annual Savings
discounted to present (3) Total PW of Savings
Sum over lifetime of the system (4) Savings to
Investment Ratio (SIR) SIR Initial Cost/Total
PW of Savings
24
Example
Example Window Replacement For year 10 Annual
Savings2960.49 - 1490.29 - 268.78 - 0.00
1,201.42 PW of Savings 1,201.42/(1.04)10
811.63 Total PW of Savings 4,109.51 (add PW
of Savings column) SIR 4,109.51/10,000 0.41
25
FDOE Research Study
  • Service Life Cycle Cost Analysis
  • Lowering the initial cost of a facility by
    selection of lower initial cost materials will
    likely result in higher life cycle cost of the
    facility.
  • Show that low initial cost was not always best

26
FDOE Required Assumptions
  • Building Service Life 50 years
  • Inflation Rate 3.0
  • Disregard Bonding Issues
  • Discount Rate 0.0
  • No Salvage Value when systems are replaced

27
FDOE Requirements
  • Evaluate commonly selected building materials
  • Limited the amount of new materials that were
    introduced into the study
  • Primary goal was to show low initial cost was not
    always the lowest total cost over the life of the
    school
  • Analyzing individual components or material
    systems of schools not the school as a system

28
Needed for Analysis
  • Identify all costs for selected materials on a
    per square foot basis
  • Initial Cost
  • O M Cost
  • Determine the number of replacements needed

29
Service LCC Analysis
  • LCC moving money through time
  • Net Present Worth convention

Operation Cost
Replacement Cost
Maintenance Expenses
Purchase Price
30
Low initial cost vs. low LCC
31
Calculation Results
32
Increasing Initial Cost vs. LCC
33
Calculation Procedure
34
Exposed Concrete vs. Ceramic Tile with mortar
35
Cost savings from selecting low LCC vs. low
initial cost
36
Increasing Initial Cost vs. LCC
37
Increasing OM vs. LCC
38
Calculation Procedure
39
OM vs. LCC
40
Calculation Procedure
41
Concluding Thoughts
  • The economy responds to signals it is sent
  • Cheap waste disposal
  • Low costs for emissions (air, water, land)
  • Low cost for environmental impacts
  • Cheap and subsidized resources
  • Tax benefits for resource depletion
  • Green building is inherently based on Ecological
    Economics
  • Capital Cost of green buildings can be lower than
    conventional construction
  • Life Cycle Costing is a necessary step in
    assessing buildings and promoting green buildings
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