%0 Conference Proceedings %A Jennifer R Dolin %A Ned R Raynolds %B ACEEE Summer Study on Energy Efficiency in Buildings, August 23-28, 1998 %C Pacific Grove, CA %D 1998 %T The ENERGY STAR Purchasing Initiative %V 7 %2 LBNL-187936 %X
Federal, state, and local governments could save at least $139 million annually by reducing energy waste through the purchase and use of energy-efficient products. Reducing this waste would reduce annual greenhouse gas emissions by 4.1 million metric tons of carbon (MMTCs) by the year 2010; the equivalent of planting an area of trees the size of Yellowstone National Park. In addition, with $50-70 billion in purchasing power for energy-related products, specifying energy efficiency could significantly shift the market for these products.
The Federal government recently launched the ENERGY STAR® Purchasing Initiative to channel the purchasing power of state and local governments -and its environmental impact- in the direction of energy-efficient products to capture significant environmental benefits and increase the demand in the marketplace. Part of this effort studied why governments don’t currently procure the most efficient products, and attempted to identify the changes that would be necessary to allow many governments to do so. Some of the initial barriers to energy-efficient procurement that were found are:
This paper will present the results of this study and describe the mechanisms that will be put into place to address each of these barriers.