CHAMBERS IN ACTION
Local chambers across the country are taking the lead in creating and convening clean energy conversations, best practices, events and advocating on local policy.
98 Percent Of Chamber Executives Surveyed Support Clean Energy
CICE goes to ACCE 2016 and chats with local chambers about the benefits they've found with clean energy.
“Wow!” one chamber President said at the annual conference of the Association of Chamber of Commerce Executives in Savannah, GA, last week. “I can’t believe how much interest in clean energy has grown.”
Ryan Evans, who recently left his position as Vice President of the Salt Lake Chamber to become President of the Utah Solar Energy Association, said, “Solar energy has a job creation mechanism like no other. In Utah, we have more employees in solar now than in coal, and more in solar than in our utilities.”
Marc Jordan, CEO and President of the North Myrtle Beach Chamber in South Carolina, a long-time advocate for offshore wind, said “Today, we don’t talk about economic development without the word ‘clean’ in it.”
Nicole Stika of the Greater Cleveland Partnership (GCP) and Council of Smaller Enterprises (COSE) in Ohio spoke about how they are helping member businesses avoid over $2 million in utility costs through energy efficiency programs.
Alison Van Dam of the Metro South Chamber in Massachusetts called the Chamber Solar Challenge project—which gives chambers an opportunity to earn $1,000 to $5,000 in non-dues revenue for every member business that signs up to install solar panels—a “win-win-win.” It drives down energy costs, creates jobs, and attracts new businesses as well as interest from millennials, she said.
And when asked, “From a business perspective, do you agree it makes good economic sense for your state to offer more renewable energy?” a resounding 98 percent of some 60 chambers executives surveyed answered “Yes”.
In other ACCE NEWS: Congratulations to Chambers for Innovation and Clean Energy Advisory Council member Christy Gillenwater, President and CEO of the Southwest Indiana Chamber, which ACCE honored as a “Chamber of the Year.”
Pictured at top: Aaron Nelson, Chapel Hill-Carrboro Chamber; Marc Jordan, North Myrtle Beach Chamber; Ryan Evans, Salt Lake Chamber.
Pictured above: Rebecca Guzy, Greater Akron Chamber; Diane Doucette, Executive Director, CICE.
Cleveland Chamber Launches Innovative Leasing Program
COSE is taking another great leap forward in helping local businesses maximize the economic development opportunities of energy efficiency. In collaboration with the Institute for Market Transformation and Cleveland 2030, COSE has introduced a novel leasing program that increases smart commercial lease solutions for building owners and tenants to invest in—and benefit from—energy efficiency in the City of Cleveland.
As the small business arm of the Cleveland Partnership—one of the largest metropolitan chambers of commerce in the nation—the Council of Small Enterprises (COSE) has long recognized the value of helping its member businesses save money through energy efficiency.
Since 1999, COSE has helped companies reduce their energy consumption, negotiate lower energy rates, and improve their bottom lines. In 2014 alone, it helped member businesses save $4 million through utility rebates and reduce overall energy use by 54 million kilowatt hours.
Now COSE is taking another great leap forward in helping local businesses maximize the economic development opportunities of energy efficiency. In collaboration with the Institute for Market Transformation and Cleveland 2030, COSE has introduced a novel leasing program that increases smart commercial lease solutions for building owners and tenants to invest in—and benefit from—energy efficiency in the City of Cleveland.
“Our ultimate goal is to transform our downtown and offer both landlords and tenants a positive return on energy efficient investment,” said Nicole Stika, COSE’s Senior Director of Energy Services. “This is a critically important conversation, and it needs to start somewhere. The chamber is the ideal place to do that.”
COSE introduced this new high performance lease program in November at a roundtable discussion that focused on how to use leasing terms to encourage behaviors that reduce energy use in buildings and save money for owners and tenants.
It is a breakthrough solution for the lack of mutually beneficial incentives for building owners and tenants to reduce energy use. If a tenant pays for energy use, the landlord has little incentive to invest in efficient equipment. At the same time, since the tenant does not own the lighting, heating, cooling and ventilation systems, they have no incentive (or ability) to invest in efficiency upgrades. The result is that neither party takes the initiative to perform energy-saving improvements. In commercial rental properties, this “split incentive” problem and lack of tenant engagement strategies frequently limits the adoption of energy efficiency solutions.
In what could be a model for the nation, energy aligned leases overcome this obstacle by establishing incentives, fostering information sharing, and encouraging landlords and tenants to collaborate on the efficient use of energy and other resources.