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With a rising deluge of buzzwords and phrases ranging from sustainability and climate change to energy efficiency and green building seeping into nearly all industries, it’s hard to ignore HVAC’s role in lessening the environmental impact of buildings in the United States and worldwide.
I recently spoke with Ralph DiNola, CEO of Portland, Oregon-based New Buildings Institute, a nonprofit working to improve the energy performance of commercial buildings, who told me about a decades-old bump in the road: federal preemption rules.
The U.S. Green Building Council and Informa Exhibitions U.S. have released a sustainability report on the impact of energy use and waste management at last year’s Greenbuild in Los Angeles.
Registration is now open for the annual conference, which will include a technical program on net-zero energy buildings and a research summit outlining the latest on building science and renewable energy.
Peter Templeton, senior vice president of global market development at the U.S. Green Building Council, is joining the World Green Building Council’s board of directors as an incoming director.
A science building at Georgia Southern University in Statesboro, Georgia, underwent renovations to meet the mechanical and educational needs of its students.
The expo took up 469,540 square feet of the convention center, with 2,063 exhibitors showing their sheet metal forming, green HVAC and zero energy building products.