Policy Brief: Low-Income Multifamily Energy Savings Retrofits

New CLEE/UCLA Policy Brief Highlights Top Solutions to Increase Access to Incentives and Unlock Benefits

Improving the energy performance of existing buildings will be key to achieving California’s efficiency and greenhouse gas emission goals. But owners of low-income, multifamily buildings face some of the greatest obstacles, including difficult access to capital, complex financing arrangements, and competing renovation needs. Residents in these buildings also experience a “split incentive” problem that limits owners’ financial interest in upgrades that primarily reduce residents’ utility bills.

While California’s energy regulators and electric utilities fund and operate a number of incentive and rebate programs, structural barriers have hampered progress, including strict income qualification criteria, energy data opacity, and the complexity of combining multiple incentives into one project.

To address these challenges, UC Berkeley and UCLA Schools of Law are issuing today a new policy brief based on two stakeholder convenings that identified policy solutions to address key barriers, increase access to energy efficiency incentives, and unlock environmental, financial, and quality-of-life benefits for owners and residents alike. A full-length report detailing the comprehensive findings will be released later this year. Among the solutions identified are:

  • The Legislature or Public Utilities Commission could create a single, statewide “one-stop shop” efficiency program administrator for users to obtain information about available programs, determine applicability, submit all filings, manage participation, and receive technical assistance.
  • The Legislature could create a long-term fund to support the one-stop shop Administrator and subsidize advanced efficiency measures, allowing owner/developers to plan efficiency projects in line with their long-term obligations.
  • State energy regulators could create a comprehensive database to help prioritize retrofit projects and support Energy Commission energy data benchmarking and analysis efforts under AB 802.

You can access the policy brief here. The full report, which will include these and many more policy recommendations, will be released later in 2019.

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Reader Comments

One Reply to “Policy Brief: Low-Income Multifamily Energy Savings Retrofits”

  1. There is nothing newsworthy about energy saving retrofits – its an old government program that has been around for over 50 years and is not cost effective and does very little in terms of saving energy (mostly a big government scam).

    It is useful to note the obvious pause in climate hysteria on Legal Planet – that’s progress. Screaming climate kooks and the California Environmental Bar cannot change the global climate back to where it was before their silly little “crisis,” and their empty ignorant rhetoric is no longer credible nor interesting. Climate mitigation is a hoax.

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About Ted

Ted Lamm is a Senior Research Fellow at CLEE. Ted’s research focuses on California policies regarding climate change and greenhouse gas emissions, and the relationships…

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About Ted

Ted Lamm is a Senior Research Fellow at CLEE. Ted’s research focuses on California policies regarding climate change and greenhouse gas emissions, and the relationships…

READ more

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