GreenBuild Blog
Saturday, November 29, 2008
Google’s Green Agenda and Real Energy Savings
According to a story last month in the New York Times, Google is “seriously dabbling” in green energy investments. Do you think that a company like Google can produce results through investments in startup companies? Is this a good use of their time and money? Will their lobbying power convince the Obama administration and the Congress to raise the stakes with more than $15 billion annual investment in clean energy technologies? Think how that money could really be used to help the economy. If a cost-effective building energy retrofit would cost $1.50 per square foot, then $15 billion would retrofit 10 billion square feet of U.S. real estate, producing (at $0.50 per sq.ft. annual savings, i.e. a three-year payback) $5 billion a year in real energy savings. 10 billion square feet is roughly equivalent to 2,500 buildings the size of Chicago’s Merchandise Mart, the largest since commercial building in the country. If this government investment were leveraged only 2 to 1, we could retrofit 20 billion square feet per year. In four years we could retrofit all of the US commercial real estate, based on the 72 billion square foot size of the building stock in 2003, according to the Department of Energy. That’s where the money should be going, don’t you think?
Posted by Jerry on 11/29/2008 at 09:06 AM
This entry has been viewed 488 times.
Corporate Sustainability / Green Business Practices • PermalinkPage 1 of 1 pages


