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Lend Lease Rolls CO2 Back to Pre-climate Change Levels

Article by Raefer Willis, originally published on LinkedIn 

For over 650,000 years, atmospheric CO2 has never risen beyond 300ppm. Yet, in a short 65 years global levels have escalated to a frightening 400ppm and catalyzed climate change. These levels continue to rise rapidly everywhere… except inside Lend Lease’s Shanghai Headquarters. There, morning CO2 typically hovers around 280 ppm: levels unseen for over 150 years.

As a pilot project undergoing RESET™ certification, the office began tracking indoor air quality (IAQ) across 5 health parameters (see below) shortly after completion. The results are changing how we view the contribution of interior spaces to environmental regeneration.


The Lend Lease office checks all the boxes in terms of being a modern ‘green’ office: from access to natural light through to integrated recycling stations. It is also beautifully designed, especially in terms of artificial lighting, where the majority of lights were removed from the ceiling and brought closer to the occupants by using canopy like fixtures between the workstations.

Yet what truly sets the office apart is its integration and use of plants as machines for tempering indoor air quality. Here, Lend Lease pursued the oft quoted but rarely implemented figure of 8 plants per person, established by Dr. Wolverton during his research for NASA. The visual result is a layering of plants neatly arrayed atop filing cabinets and workspace dividers, set against green walls that cover most of the structural columns throughout the office.


Whereas green walls have become ‘de rigeur’ in most certified projects over the past few years, they are rarely integrated into work spaces (mostly being reserved for atriums and lobbies) and their performance is almost never quantified. In this case, performance is tracked minute by minute and reported in real-time to the staff’s smart phones as well as a dynamic certification plaque for staff and visitors alike

Acting as living machines, plants are only effective when they are healthy and thriving. In a recent tour of the office Steve Willet, Managing Director of Lend Lease joked, “The plants are definitely thriving. If the gardeners weren’t in here every week trimming the foliage we would be working in the Amazon.”

The numbers reflect this. Over the summer, morning CO2 levels were typically below 300 ppm: levels that pre-date climate change. What’s best is that the plants have barely even settled in and are still looking a bit sparse: they should be performing even more in 3-6 months. During office hours the levels are currently well within the 700 ppm limit for healthy interiors. This is in stark contrast to the average Shanghai office which hovers between 1200 and 1800ppm.

Although the office had slightly elevated levels of VOCs at the onset, these were rapidly brought within limits and now are typically below 0.1 ug/m3 (the health limit is 0.45). Many office interiors are 2-10 times above health limits even 1 year after completion.

Particulate matter, mostly handled by filters added to the fresh air system, averages below 35ppm, the health limit set by the EPA for PM2.5. All combined, these results make the Lend Lease office one of the healthiest in Shanghai.

The last remaining challenge in terms of IAQ is humidity. Like most buildings in Shanghai the K.Wah Center (in which the Lend Lease office is located) does not have a dehumidification system. As a result indoor humidity levels are typically identical to outdoor levels. In Shanghai, this means well over 75%. Lend Lease has identified this as an opportunity to increase comfort while reducing energy consumption within their own buildings: dehumidification requires less energy than heating and cooling per degree of perceived temperature. In other words, by lowering humidity levels 30-50%, interior temperatures can made warmer in summer and cooler in winter while achieving the same comfort level, resulting in potentially significant energy savings.

“Lend Lease is a global leader in health and sustainability,” says Willet. “In China, this will mean being able to offer clean air to our clients while further reducing energy consumption. In terms of research, we need to lead by example and prove results with hard data.”

In this case the data is not only excellent but it changes the paradigm for interior spaces. Consider for a moment that on a bad day the healthiest outdoor air in Shanghai is probably right next to the Lend Lease exhaust.
Up until now the focus for green interiors has been about making them less bad. Creating an interior with a positive environmental footprint has been viewed as virtually impossible. The Lend Lease office is challenging this notion and making us wonder how interiors can be used as machines for cleaning outdoor air. When the ‘waste’ air from a building is cleaner than the incoming air you know you’re onto something good.

All photos by Marković Nebojša

More about this project.

Solar is so popular right now, we’re facing a shortage of panels!

SunTech solar panel maker from china

© SunTech

From glut to shortage for first time since 2006

It’s worth repeating again and again: The price per watt of solar power is going through the floor while worldwide installed capacity is going through the roof (up 53x in the past 9 years!). This is great for the environment, because for each solar panel that goes up, demand for electricity from dirty sources goes down, causing a great virtuous cycle of demand destruction. But there are limits to how fast an industry can grow, and we’re apparently starting to hit those limits, at least temporarily, and production will need to further increase to keep up.

Demand is expected to go up 29% this year, so it’s not surprising that supply has a hard time keeping up. That’s exactly why Elon Musk and SolarCity say that we will need many solar gigafactories.

The last time supply was tight, in 2006, the solar industry installed about 1.5 gigawatts that year. Contrast with today: The industry expects to install as much as 52 gigawatts this year and 61 gigawatts in 2015. That’s about as much as is actually being produced by viable factories.

image

Renewable Energy Policy Network/Screen capture

Back in 2011, I wrote something called The Solar Industry is Like a Yo-Yo to explain the boom-bust cycle facing solar panel makers:

“For about as long as it has existed, the solar power industry has been going from boom to bust, and vice versa. It is growing fast, and has been for years, but forget about a smooth upward curve: Up close, the trajectory looks like the Alps.”

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Renewable Energy Policy Network/Screen capture

Busts might be bad for individual companies, but they aren’t necessarily bad for solar power itself, as we’ve seen in the past few years. A glut of panels meant that prices fell and a lot more solar power was installed than if prices had been high.

Now that demand has grown to match, and maybe now exceed, supply, the opposite will happen. Solar prices will go up, or at least not fall as fast, and more solar panel makers will make money. This will attract competition and new investments in additional capacity until supply once again overtakes demand and prices fall because of the glut…

Wash, rinse, repeat.

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© BNEF

Originally published on Bloomberg.

Architects worldwide commit to net-zero energy buildings

Tue, 08/26/2014 – 09:52 – Alan Mwendwa

Architects from across the world unanimously adopted the 2050 Imperative, which commits them to 100 percent net-zero energy design and construction by that year.

Members of the International Union of Architects signed the document at last week’s annual World Congress. Member organizations represent over 1.3 million architects in 124 countries. This is the first time in the organization’s 65-year history that Architect Councils from every region of the world have signed a declaration.

Initiated and drafted by Architecture 2030, it flowed through the American Institute of Architects and then to the International World Congress.

The 2050 Imperative says, “Recognizing the architects’ central role in planning and designing the built environment, and the need to reduce carbon emissions to zero by 2050 and provide equal access to shelter, we commit to promote the following actions.”

Engage in research and set targets to meet the 2050 goal.

Plan and design cities, towns, urban developments and new buildings to be carbon neutral (net-zero energy), using no more energy over the course of a year than they produce, or import from renewable energy sources.

Renovate and rehabilitate existing cities, towns, urban redevelopments and buildings to be carbon neutralwhile respecting cultural and heritage values.

In those cases where net-zero isn’t feasible or practical, designs will be extremely efficient, with the ability to produce or import all energy from renewable energy sources in the future.

Advocate and promote socially responsible architecture to the community.

Architecture 2030 recently released Roadmap to Zero Emissions plans to help member organizations meet the goals.

“We have made great strides towards a sustainable built environment, but we still need to advance the industry to make sustainable design the de facto standard for all construction projects,” says Helene Combs Dreiling, president of American Institute of Architects.

Over the next 20 years, “an area roughly equal to 60 percent of the total building stock of the world is projected to be built and rebuilt in urban areas worldwide, providing an unprecedented opportunity to set the global building sector on a path to phase out carbon emissions by 2050,” the document says.

Architects voted on the 2050 Imperative in advance of the United Nations Climate Summit in Paris, France next year. We want to “send a strong message to the Parties of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, and to the world, that we are committed to a truly sustainable and equitable future.”

California and the EU have passed laws requiring net-zero buildings.

Source: GreenBiz