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GSA releases updated standards to move federal buildings toward zero emissions

Government Buildings

GSA releases updated standards to move federal buildings toward zero emissions

Mandatory design and construction standards, performance criteria for 300,000 federal buildings


By Peter Fabris, Contributing Editor | August 14, 2024
Image by rus-burkhanov from Pixabay

Image by rus-burkhanov from Pixabay

The U.S. General Services Administration (GSA) recently released updated building efficiency standards for federal buildings.

The mandatory design and construction standards and performance criteria apply to 300,000 federal buildings. The standards will advance building efficiency, reduce emissions, and increase resilience, according to a GSA news release.

The standards will advance the Federal Sustainability Plan to achieve net-zero emissions from all federal buildings by 2045, and promote the use of American-made, low carbon construction materials.

The P100 standards require that facilities adopt advanced energy conservation strategies and eliminate on-site fossil fuel use. The standards call for grid-interactive efficient buildings, leverage innovative technologies through GSA’s Green Proving Ground, require the use of low-embodied carbon materials, and potable water reuse.

The standards address:

• Electrification: New standards for building equipment and systems to be powered by clean energy sources.
• Embodied Carbon: Requirement to utilize low-embodied carbon materials, including salvaged, reused, regenerative, and biomimetic options. 
• Energy Efficiency: Enhanced building envelope performance to minimize energy loss and improve overall efficiency.
• Grid-Interactive Efficient Buildings: New measures to support a more resilient, responsive grid.

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