MARKET DATA
THE SIZE AND IMPACT OF THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT
- The U.S. non-residential buildings inventory includes more than 5 million buildings.
- Those buildings consume 39% of all energy used in the U.S., including 70% of all electricity.
- Buildings use 12% of all potable water – 15 trillion gallons per year.
- Buildings use 40% of raw materials globally (3 billion tons annually).
- Non-residential buildings construction value for 2007 totaled nearly $450 billion dollars.
- The total U.S. construction industry (commercial, residential and industrial) represents about 14% of the $10 trillion U.S. Gross Domestic Product – about $1.4 trillion annually.
THE GREEN BUILDING MARKET – SIGNIFICANT...AND GROWING
- The USGBC estimates the 2008 market for green building products and services at $12 billion and projects that to increase to $60 billion by 2010. (Source: McGraw-Hill Construction Analytics, SmartMarket Trends Report 2008)
- According to FMI’s Green Building Forecast report, green non-residential construction put in place was $13.4 billion in 2006. By 2008, $21.2 billion of all new non-residential construction will use green building principles, a 58% increase in just two years and a 110% increase since 2005.
- Accounting for more than 80% of total non-residential green construction in 2008, the three largest segments for non-residential green building are offices, education and health care.
- Green buildings report using 32% less energy; 26% less natural gas; and 36% less total energy than traditional buildings, according to the USGBC.
LEEDING THE WAY TO A GREENER FUTURE
- 6,223 LEED- New Construction registered building projects; an additional 952 have completed certification
- 926 LEED-Existing Building registered building projects; an additional 68 have completed certification
- 9,867 total LEED-registered projects; 1,283 total LEED-certified projects
- Nearly 3.2 billion square feet of commercial floor space is involved in LEED
- Every business day, $464 million worth of construction registers with LEED.*
- Between 2001 and 2006, USGBC membership increased from 500 to 10,000 members.
- 12 federal agencies have adopted LEED standards and 22 states, 55
cities, 11 counties and 8 towns have passed LEED-related adoptions,
many of which require public buildings to serve as models of
sustainability.
- There are LEED projects in all 50 states.
*Worldwide figures.
Click here for more information on the USGBC. (link to www.usgbc.org)
Sources: U.S. Green Building Council, FMI 2008 U.S. Markets Construction Overview, Mc-Graw-Hill Construction Analytics.