The energy usage of 40,146 public buildings—including schools, hospitals, and offices—in England and Wales is being released to the public. Among the findings: only 568 buildings get 1% or more of their electrical energy from renewable energy sources but 119 buildings get more than 50% of their electrical energy from renewable sources; Manchester University has the highest carbon emissions on this list, producing 51,601 tons of CO2 in 2008; and a recreation center uses the most electricity proportionally of any building on this list: 475 kw per hour per square metre.
Source: Sustainable Cities Collective
Related Stories
Energy Efficiency | Nov 6, 2015
DOE’s Energy Asset Score diagnostic tool gets upgrade
The tool is used to assess energy efficiency of commercial and multifamily buildings.
Energy Efficiency | Oct 30, 2015
Boston’s energy reporting law shows older buildings more efficient than post-1950 structures
First year of reporting tracks 45% of commercial building space.
Energy Efficiency | Oct 28, 2015
San Francisco energy consumption benchmarking ordinance bears fruit
Efficiency has improved since 2011 law initiated.
Energy Efficiency | Oct 12, 2015
Renewables surging in mix of U.S. energy generation
‘Tectonic Shift’ as coal use plummets; wind and solar rise.
Energy Efficiency | Oct 2, 2015
New York City launches accelerator program for energy efficiency retrofits
Goal is 1,000 buildings a year.
Sponsored | Energy Efficiency | Sep 28, 2015
Nation’s first zero energy retail store features metal roof, composite panels
The building, a Walgreens made with metal and composite material from Petersen Aluminum Corp., includes enough sustainable features to attempt to earn LEED Platinum status.
Energy Efficiency | Sep 25, 2015
Federal renewable energy mandate prompts retrofits
Agencies must get 30% of electricity from renewables by 2025
Energy Efficiency | Aug 28, 2015
North American Passive House Network e-book explains Passivhaus, net-zero techniques
Free guide includes spotlight on individual projects
Energy Efficiency | Aug 24, 2015
Google develops Google Maps for solar energy
The tool offers high-resolution aerial maps, like the one used in Google Earth, to estimate the total sunlight a rooftop receives throughout the year.