DOE Funds Energy Efficiency Training Centers

06/20/2012
SustainableBusiness.com News

It's one thing to build green, it's another to understand how to optimize its efficiency once built.

Commercial building operators are about to get the training they need to optimize building efficiency while reducing energy waste and saving money.

"Improving energy efficiency in business and manufacturing is critical for helping American businesses keep costs down and stay competitive in the global economy," says Secretary of Energy Steve Chu. "The first step is ensuring we have well-trained buildings and facilities operators that know how to boost building performance and keep commercial facilities from wasting energy."

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and U.S. Department of Commerce are jointly funding three Centers for Building Operations Excellence for $1.3 million to create and deploy programs that train current and incoming building operators.

The Centers are part of the Obama Administration's Better Buildings Initiative, which has a goal to increase energy efficiency in commercial buildings 20% by 2020, while lowering energy bills by $40 billion per year.  The initiative will support over 100,000 construction jobs over the next two years as it upgrades over 1.6 billion square feet of public and private buildings.

The three Centers will work with universities, local community and technical colleges, trade associations, and DOE's national labs to create the training programs. 

The Centers, chosen through a competitive grants process, are:

Specifically, the funding will help the three Centers develop curricula and pilot training programs for building operators, managers and energy service providers, focusing on building re-tuning, energy management, and building operations in commercial, industrial, and educational buildings.

The training will outline steps building operators can take to reduce energy consumption, save money and drive continuous improvement in a broad range of commercial buildings.

Better Buildings website:

Website: www1.eere.energy.gov/buildings/betterbuildings