Links
Home Performance Industry News
- Click here to view a syndicated collection of industry news.
Home Performance Contracting Professional
Organizations
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ACI
- Advancing Home Performance
- ACI, a non-profit organization, celebrated 20 years of training
building and housing professionals in 2006. Founded as the Affordable
Comfort Conference in 1986, our roots are in defining the best way to make
homes energy efficient, without harming the residents and the building.
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Efficiency
First
- Efficiency First is a Non-Profit Trade Association dedicated to
retrofitting America’s homes, building the industry infrastructure to create
jobs, and reducing energy consumption, carbon emissions, and our dependence on
foreign oil. Efficiency First represents America’s Home Performance Workforce,
ranging from energy auditors and raters to contractors who are the front line of
our climate battle, embodied in green-collar jobs from weatherization to HVAC.
Efficiency First is organized so that the Home Performance Workforce can be
represented in both National and State level policy conversations.
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Home Performance
Resource Center
- The Home Performance Resource Center is a
national nonprofit organization formed to conduct public
policy and market research in support of the Home
Performance industry. The Resource Center develops
research materials for policymakers, energy program
managers and industry leaders to promote job creation,
economic recovery, lower household energy bills and deep
reductions in residential carbon emissions through
improved home energy efficiency.
Training and Certifying Organizations
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Building
Performance Institute
- The Building Performance Institute (BPI) offers nationally-recognized
training, certification, accreditation and quality-assurance programs.
Raising the bar in home performance contracting.
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Residential
Energy Services Network
- The Residential Energy Services Network's (RESNET
®
)
mission is to ensure the success of the building energy performance
certification industry, set the standards of quality, and increase the
opportunity for ownership of high performance buildings.
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Home
Performance with EnergyStar
- Home Performance with ENERGY STAR, a national program from the U.S. EPA and
U.S. DOE, offers a comprehensive, whole-house approach to improving energy
efficiency and comfort at home, while helping to protect the environment.
This program is currently not available in Washington State due to lack
of a program sponsor.
State Home Performance Groups
- California Building Performance
Contracting Association
- California Building Performance Contractors Association (CBPCA) helps
green contractors identify and perform quality Green Home Energy
Upgrades—our name for comprehensive (i.e., whole-house) energy
efficiency improvements that improve homeowner’s comfort and indoor air
quality while lowering their energy bills. We are a non-profit,
utility-sponsored organization dedicated to improving residential energy
efficiency in California.
- Building Performance Contractors
Association / NYS
- The Building Performance Contractors Association / NYS is a coalition of
building performance contractors, home energy raters, building
diagnosticians, energy auditors & consultants in New York State providing
services which increase the comfort, health and safety, efficiency and
durability of housing through the treatment of the house as a whole system.
- Maine Home
Performance
- The mission of Maine Home Performance with Energy Star is to create a
sustainable market throughout the State of Maine for diagnosis and treatment
of homes to make them healthy, comfortable and energy efficient. The Program
links Maine homeowners with qualified and certified Evaluators who provide
one-stop-shop access to a whole-house approach to home improvements.
- PA Home Energy
- PA Home Energy is a new program that is focused on helping Pennsylvania
consumers reduce their home energy use. The program integrates the general
principles of whole house performance with green home design. At the heart
of PA Home Energy is ENERGY STAR – a joint program of the U.S. Department of
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the U.S. Department of Energy
(DOE).
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Home Performance Contractors Guild of Oregon
- The HPC Guild represents a collective of contractors
that have been instrumental in the development of energy
efficiency programs in the Portland area such as Clean
Energy Works Portland. We continue to work with
policymakers at the city and Metro level, with the
Energy Trust, and with financial institutions to improve
these programs and bring them to scale. The HPC
Guild serves as the Efficiency First chapter for the
state of Oregon.
Utility Conservation Programs
State of Washington Agencies
Publications
- Home Energy Magazine
- Home Energy magazine’s mission is to disseminate objective and
practical information on residential energy efficiency, performance,
comfort, and affordability. It is the only magazine that thoroughly covers
residential comfort issues from the only approach that really works, systems
engineering.
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Do
It Yourself Home Energy Audit
- Published in 2008 by the Seattle Green Building Program, this downloadable
guide shows you the ins and out of energy audits, including the benefits of
hiring a professional who can perform pressure diagnostics and thermal scans
using infrared imaging. Print copies are available from various local
agencies and utilities.
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Unlocking energy
efficiency in
the US economy
(McKinsey, 2009)
In this report, McKinsey
& Company offers a detailed analysis of the magnitude of
the efficiency potential in non-transportation uses of
energy, a thorough assessment of the barriers that
impede the capture of greater efficiency, and an outline
of the practical solutions available to unlock the
potential.
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Rebuilding America A Policy Framework for Investment in
Energy Efficiency Retrofits
(Center for American Progress, 2009) Without a strong
public policy framework, the private sector acting alone
will not invest to maximize the clear private and public
benefits of encouraging comprehensive energy efficiency,
and the harm to the global climate will continue
unabated. Over time, however, the public-sector role in
jump starting these new energy efficiency markets can be
reduced as the private sector develops improved business
and finance models and once a price is established on
global warming pollution. That is the path outlined in
this paper.
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