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The Opportunity of ENERGY STAR Version 3 – Teamwork!

ENERGY STAR Homes Version 3 Teamwork

ENERGY STAR homes Version 3 teamworkI’ve been involved with ENERGY STAR homes since 2004, when it was still in Version 1 of the program. It wasn’t called that at the time, though. It was just ENERGY STAR. At that time, a home needed only one inspection, which occurred when the house was finished.

I’ve been involved with ENERGY STAR homes since 2004, when it was still in Version 1 of the program. It wasn’t called that at the time, though. It was just ENERGY STAR. At that time, a home needed only one inspection, which occurred when the house was finished.

Version 2, which started in 2006, introduced the predrywall inspection, during which the HERS rater had to complete the Thermal Bypass Checklist, and included stiffer HVAC requirements. The house had to have a Manual J heating and cooling load calculation, and the cooling system had to be sized to no more than 115% of the cooling load (or the next available size in some cases).

In Versions 1 and 2, builders could get their houses qualified for the ENERGY STAR label without fully buying into the program – and many did just that. They paid a home energy rater and expected that person to do all the work and hand them their certificate at the end.

HVAC contractors reluctantly cranked out Manual J load calculations, which often were not correct, and often tried to oversize beyond the ENERGY STAR limits. Yes, even with inflated load calculations, the air conditioners were still oversized a lot of times.

I believe that’s going to change with Version 3. The requirements are stiffer, and the growing trend of ‘leedigation’ (a combination of LEED, the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design green building program of the US Green Building Council, and litigation) is starting to get the attention of stakeholders in certification programs.

Participants have two real choices now: They can drop out of the program or really buy into it and work as a team to get it done the right way. If a builder, trade contractor, or HERS rater signs off on a checklist that isn’t correct, they open themselves up to liability.

We’ll be doing a lot of training for stakeholders in the ENERGY STAR homes program next year to for all those who’re ready to embrace the team spirit. We’ve just set up an ENERGY STAR training page and will be posting our schedule of classes as soon as we have it. You can also download our 16 page white paper for a head start on understanding the new requirements.

 

Download our free 16 page white paper by clicking the link below:

ENERGY STAR Version 3 White Paper

 

Photo from jurvetson on flickr.com and used under Creative Commons license

This Post Has 2 Comments

  1. Energy Star grows a pair!
    Energy Star grows a pair! This is an exciting and much needed development.  
     
    Nothing worse that a lazy/sloppy HVAC contractor who drops all the windows onto the West side of the home to bump the cooling loads up. Silly. 
     
    I suspect Home Builders Associations, like the one in the Twin cities, will resist the new program and condemn it for adding cost and work at a time when they can’t sell a home. The real challenge for ES is to convince homeowners that a home without the ES label is not a home worth owning.

  2. Michael, I agree completely!
    Michael, I agree completely! When I met David Lee, who was then head of the ES homes program, at the ’04 RESNET conference, I complained to him about their allowing huge homes to qualify by the same rules as Habitat homes, especially with the biases built in that favor larger homes anyway. Finally, 7 years later, we’re making large homes work harder. And that’s only one of the major changes in ES V3! 
     
    I haven’t seen HVAC contractors dumping all the windows on the west, but I’ve seen single pane windows in a Manual J for a house that had double pane, low-e windows and lots of extra people added to build load. 
     
    The challenge before your challenge, though, is just to make people that the ES label is for homes, too. I ask a lot of people about this, and although everyone knows about ES, few know that it applies to houses, too.

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