Sustainability Flashcards

1
Q

How is the RICS helping introduce sustainability into practice (R, BPS, BPT, EU)?

A
  • Evidence-based research
  • Best practice statements e.g. Guidance Note on Sustainability and Commercial Property Valuation, 2013
  • Best practice training
  • Energy use in clients’ buildings and associated regulation (e.g. energy performance certification and minimum performance standards)
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2
Q

What legally binding commitment has the UK government made on carbon dioxide emissions, and how was it amended in 2019?

A
  • UK Government made a legally binding commitment to cut the UK’s carbon dioxide emissions by 80% on 1990 levels by 2050 (Climate Change Act 2008)
  • This has seen been amended in 2019 for the UK to achieve “net zero carbon” by 2050
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3
Q

What legislation requires all buildings in Europe to be subject to energy labeling and energy use reduction?

A

Energy Performance of Buildings Directive (EPBD)

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4
Q

What did the UK government do in response to the Energy Performance of Buildings Directive (EPBD)?

A
  • Amended the energy requirements contained in Part L of the Building Regulations
  • Introduced Energy Performance of Building Regulations
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5
Q

What are the FIVE key provisions of the Energy Performance of Buildings Directive (EPBD) (HS, ECM, MR, EC, MIBAC)?

A
  1. Higher standards of energy conservation for new and refurbished buildings
  2. Establishing a calculation methodology for the energy performance of all buildings
  3. Minimum requirements for the energy performance of all buildings
  4. Energy certification for all buildings when leased or sold
  5. Mandatory inspection of boilers and air conditioning systems in buildings
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6
Q

When is an EPC required (size, durations/transaction types, building works)?

A

EPC required for all commercial buildings over 50 sqm:

  • When it is newly built, sold or let for a term of more than 6 months (& less than 99 years). Also applies for sub-letting and assignments of leases
  • When it is newly refurbished and heating, air conditioning or ventilation services are altered, and/or the building is subject to Building Regulations for construction
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7
Q

What properties are exempt from an EPC (LB, NH, R, T, D/R, R (duration))?

A
  • Listed buildings
  • Buildings which have no heating
  • Religious buildings
  • Temporary buildings
  • Buildings due to be demolished/redeveloped
  • Residential units not occupied more than 4 months a year
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8
Q

What are the EPC requirements for marketing (commissioned, responsibility, particulars, online)?

A
  • Ensure the EPC is commissioned BEFORE marketing. Must be commissioned within 7 days of the commencements of marketing (28-day limit for procurement if after using all reasonable efforts the EPC cannot be obtained within 7 days)
  • Agents are responsible for procuring EPCs
  • Only the actual energy rating is required to be displayed on property and advertisements. Where space allows, the graph should be shown
  • All online marketing material must have a link to the EPC to show the front page of the EPC
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9
Q

What is included on the front page of an EPC (A, FA, C/RRN, TI, E RC, R, B)?

A
  1. Address of property and floor area
  2. EPC certificate and reference number
  3. Technical information on the property’s energy provision
  4. Estimation of energy running costs
  5. An energy performance rating from A+ to G
  6. Benchmarking information
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10
Q

How long is an EPC valid for, and subject to what?

A

10 years unless the building is altered, after which a new EPC would be required

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11
Q

Where would you find an EPC?

A

EPC online register holds EPCs available for inspection

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12
Q

What are the penalties for non-compliance of (not getting or displaying?) commercial EPCs? Who enforces the regulations?

A
  • Local authorities’ Trading Standards teams enforce the regulations
  • Commercial: max penalty is equal to 12.5% of the RV of the building (a minimum of £500 and maximum of £5,000 fine)
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13
Q

What do the Minimum Energy Efficiency Standards (MEES) as set out in the Energy Efficiency (Private Rented Property) (England and Wales) Regulations, 2015 require?

A

Minimum EPC rating of Level E. Implementation was in stages:

  • New leases from 1 April 2018 (for both commercial and residential properties) to include lease renewals/extensions
  • All existing leases from 1 April 2023 for commercial properties
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14
Q

What are the exemptions for MEES regulation compliance (1 obvious, POW, LE, duration/security, PB (subject to obtaining what), resi. cost, DV, C, RL), and which only last for 5 years and cannot be transferred on sale?

A

Normal EPC exemptions:

  • If a building does not need an EPC
  • Places of worship
  • Industrial units or workshops with a low energy demand (e.g. no heating or cooling)
  • Where the tenancy is less than 6 months with no security of tenure
  • Where the tenancy is for more than 99 years

5 year/no transfer exemptions:

  • When it is not feasible to improve the EPC rating to E or above even when all possible improvements with a payback of 7 years or sooner have been made. 3 quotes for relevant works must be obtained from energy assessors
  • Landlords of residential properties are required, from April 2019, to spend up to £3,500 to improve the energy efficiency of properties. A landlord who spends the full £3,500 on a property but is unable to bring the rating up to E would be entitled to register an exemption
  • When the devaluation case can be proven i.e. improvements would reduce market value of a property by more than 5%
  • When third-party consent from a tenant, landlord or planning authority for improvements is refused or conditionality cannot be reasonably met by the landlord
  • Certain types of residential lease (e.g. company lets, second homes, very high or very low rents) and landlords (i.e. public sector and social landlords)
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15
Q

Where must MEES exemptions be registered/renewed?

A

Exemptions must be pre-registered on the Local Authority Private Rented Sector Exemptions Register and renewed five-yearly

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16
Q

What did the government’s consultation on the expansion of MEES find in October last year (preferred/alternative, by what date), and what changes may be made to Part L carbon factor and the Reference Building, and with what consequence?

A
  • Preferred trajectory: minimum EPC rating of B by 1 April 2030
  • Alternative trajectory: minimum EPC rating of C by 1 April 2030

o Anticipated new Part L to use carbon factor for grid electricity significantly below current factor, resulting in improvements for electric heating.
o Potential update to Reference Building that generates EPC rating – change from gas for heating/hot to electricity, resulting in increased difficulty for gas heated buildings to meet minimum standard.

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17
Q

What are the penalties for non-compliance with MEES (+- 3 months, %/max. penalty)?

A
  • Breach has lasted less than 3 months – up to £5,000 or (if greater) 10% of the Rateable Value with a maximum penalty of £50,000
  • Where a breach has lasted more than 3 months – up to £10,000 or (if greater) 20% of the Rateable Value with a maximum penalty of £150,000
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18
Q

Who polices non-compliance with MEES?

A

Local authority

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19
Q

What is the Energy Savings Opportunity Scheme (ESOS)/ who applies to (employees, turnover, annual balance sheet)?

A

Energy assessment scheme that is mandatory for large organisation in the UK (more than 250 employees, turnover more than €50m and an annual balance sheet total of €43m)

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20
Q

What does the Energy Savings Opportunity Scheme (ESOS) require of participating organisations (M, C, R)?

A
  • Measure total energy consumption across buildings, transport and industrial activities
  • Conduct energy audits to identify cost-effective energy efficiency recommendations
  • Report compliance to the Environment Agency
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21
Q

What are the Heat Network (Billing and Metering) Regulations, 2014 (provision of…, C provision)?

A
  • Provision of communal heating systems in multi-occupied commercial and residential schemes and to district heating systems
  • Final consumers must be provided with accurate meter reading / bill information and competitively priced individual meters
22
Q

What is the Carbon Reduction Commitment (CRC) Energy Efficiency Scheme, and what replaced with?

A
  • CRC is to be scrapped following the Government’s Business Energy Taxation Review (2015)
  • Was replaced by the Climate Change Levy (CCL) in 2019
23
Q

What is the Climate Change Levy (CCL), why introduced, and where does money go to/from, and what energy is exempt?

A
  • Tax on energy delivered to non-domestic users in the United Kingdom. It was introduced as an incentive to increase energy efficiency within businesses and so to reduce carbon emissions
  • Consumers are charged by their energy providers who forward the c.£1.9 bn per annum to the UK Treasury
  • Energy generated from renewable sources is exempt from CCL
24
Q

What do Display Energy Certificates (DECs) display, when required?

A
  • Display the actual energy used and carbon dioxide emissions
  • Required for public buildings over 250 sqm
25
Q

What does BREEAM stand for?

A

Building Research Establishment Environmental Assessment Method

26
Q

What is a BREEAM rating, and when commonly required currently?

A

A voluntary environmental assessment tool to rate new and refurbished commercial and residential buildings.
They are commonly being required to support planning applications

27
Q

What are some of the environmental standards that BREEAM assessors have reference to (9, only 5 mentioned, EC, WU, TL, WM, H&W)?

A

Rated by reference to the nine environmental weightings which include:

  • Energy consumption
  • Water use
  • Transport links
  • Waste management
  • Health & wellbeing
28
Q

What are the 6 BREEAM ratings (U, P, G, VG, E, O)?

A
  • Unclassified
  • Pass
  • Good
  • Very good
  • Excellent
  • Outstanding
29
Q

Other than BREEAM, what are some of the other building environmental assessment tools (USA/Germany/France/Australia)?

A
  • LEED (Leadership in Energy and Design – USA)
  • DGBN (Germany)
  • HQE (France)
  • NABERS (Australia)
30
Q

How did the government amend the Climate Change Act 2008 in 2019?

A

Required the UK to achieve “net zero carbon” by 2050

31
Q

What have a number of leading UK property funds and REITs done to commit to achieving net zero carbon by 2050, and who assisted in creation?

A
  • Formed the Better Buildings Partnership (BBP) pledge.
  • Have published various toolkits to provide guidance to owners and occupiers on how to achieve reductions in their energy, water and waste in buildings
32
Q

What is included in the UK Green Building Council (UKGBC) framework to achieve a net zero carbon building (establish what/how, reduce what 2 things, increase what and offset what)?

A
  • Establish Net Zero Carbon Scope – needs to be across the whole life of buildings i.e. carbon emissions associated with construction, use, refurbishment and demolition
  • Reduce Construction Impacts – developers need to focus on changing the material they use as well as building (and their systems’) designs
  • Reduce Operation Energy Use – landlords need to consider how to best retrofit efficiency measures into their buildings and how to work with occupiers to make these work
  • Increase Renewable Energy Supply on-site and offsite
  • Offset any Remaining Carbon – e.g. planting trees. This is the last resort
33
Q

How can the health and wellbeing of building occupants be measured, and what does this standard rate?

A
  • Some developers are using the WELL Building Standard
  • This is a standard for buildings to be rated in respect of spaces that can optimise the health and mental wellbeing of occupiers
34
Q

What is “place making”?

A

Ensuring buildings and their environs contribute positively to occupiers and the community

35
Q

What is a green lease, and what has the BBP produced to assist?

A
  • Will typically seek to ensure that landlords and tenants share information about the use of energy, water and waste arising in a building
  • The Better Buildings Partnership (BBP) has a Green Lease Toolkit with best practice recommendations for model forms of clauses
36
Q

What is the RICS Ska Rating scheme/founded by/measures what/against what 3 ratings?

A

Founded by Skansen as a result of research by the RICS and AECOM.

Measures a building’s fit out sustainability, with a gold, silver or bronze rating awarded

37
Q

What efficient construction solutions are developers using (think renewables, building placement/management)?

A
  • Renewable materials and technologies such as solar, wind, biomass and heat pumps to achieve a low carbon emission solution and a reasonable payback period
  • The building aspect and use of natural daylight to take advantage of solar gain
  • Effective energy management & monitoring systems and increased awareness of other areas of sustainable management relating to waste, water and procurement of good and services
38
Q

What are the 3 pillars of sustainability (S,E,E)?

A

Social – e.g. quality of life, community engagement
Environmental – energy, pollution, emissions, plastics, carbon footprint
Economic – risk management, economic health, making a profit

39
Q

What is the Brundtland report/published when/whom/defined what?

A

Published in 1987 by the UN. Defined the principles of sustainable development.

40
Q

What is the definition of sustainability?

A

“Sustainable development is development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.”

41
Q

What is the important role sustainability plays in real estate (think about your role/market positioning, and why broadly important (statutory, practical/economic, society expectations)?

A

As surveyors, we are uniquely placed to steer the built environment towards more sustainable practices.
Important to make buildings more sustainable to help meet carbon emission targets (cut by 100% - increased target in 2019 - under 2008 Climate Change Act), to reduce the costs involved in running a building, and to meet social/cultural demand for more sustainable building.

42
Q

How do you make clients aware of this?

A

Clients becoming more aware but try to raise awareness in our advice.

43
Q

What are some ways you can make a building more sustainable (existing and new)?

A

Existing buildings; key upgrades including replacing old services with more energy efficient installations such as heating
New; effective insulation, use of natural light, use green and sustainable building materials

44
Q

Under what legislation is an EPC required?

A

The Energy Performance of Buildings (England and Wales) Regulations 2012 under the Energy Act 2011.

45
Q

What are the drivers of sustainability (E, L, E)?

A

Ethical driver – it’s the right thing to do
Legal – there is legislation in place
Economic – affects things like tenant attitude, Market Rent

46
Q

How does placemaking link to sustainability/what are developers focusing on/why/how?

A

Developers are focusing on ensuring that development schemes contribute positively to communities, occupiers and reduce negative environmental impacts. They do this by considering layout, using renewable materials and technologies, make use of solar gain, assessing density, including greater green space.

47
Q

What is the difference between BREEAM and EPCS?

A

The Rating for outstanding efficient buildings. EPCs are produced for all buildings no matter their efficiency
and rather than just a rating they provide advice on the methods/suitability of improvement matters.

48
Q

Which buildings do not have to have an EPC?

A

Buildings which have not transacted will not have produced an EPC.

49
Q

When is an EPC required?

A

Prior to marketing, or must be received 7 working days after going to market.

50
Q

What is a green lease?

A

Where the l/l and tnt agree to have green terms written into a lease. These are rarely used in practice.

51
Q

How does the energy efficiency affect the value of a property?

A

It will affect the property firstly in terms of its desirability to a tenant or buyer.

MEES may have resulted in capital deductions included with valuations of EPC F & G rated properties.

52
Q

What are ground source heat pumps?

A

Ground Source Heat Pumps are electronically powered systems which use stored heat from the earth.