ENERGY STAR for Buildings
ENERGY STAR certification for commercial buildings is awarded by the US EPA to buildings that score 75 or higher on the ENERGY STAR 1–100 scale. The score represents the building's energy use intensity (EUI — kBtu per square foot per year) benchmarked against similar buildings nationwide, adjusted for climate, occupancy, and operating hours. A score of 75 means the building uses less energy than at least 75% of comparable buildings.
ENERGY STAR certification is earned annually — buildings must reapply each year and maintain their score. The certification is widely recognized by tenants, investors, and building buyers as a proxy for operational efficiency. Buildings with ENERGY STAR certification command premium rents and higher occupancy rates in most commercial markets.
Benchmarking in ENERGY STAR Portfolio Manager (EPA's free online tool) is required by disclosure laws in over 30 US cities and states, making ENERGY STAR benchmarking a regulatory requirement for many building owners, not just a voluntary choice.
LEED Certification
LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design), developed by the US Green Building Council (USGBC), is the most widely used green building rating system in the world, with over 100,000 projects certified globally. Unlike ENERGY STAR, which focuses solely on operational energy, LEED evaluates buildings across multiple sustainability categories:
- Energy and Atmosphere (EA) — energy efficiency, renewable energy, commissioning
- Water Efficiency (WE) — reduced water consumption
- Indoor Environmental Quality (IEQ) — ventilation, daylighting, acoustics
- Sustainable Sites (SS) — site selection, transportation, stormwater
- Materials and Resources (MR) — recycled content, low-VOC materials, waste management
- Innovation (IN) and Regional Priority (RP)
Buildings earn LEED certification tiers based on points: Certified (40–49), Silver (50–59), Gold (60–79), Platinum (80+).
Smart Building Technologies and LEED
Many LEED credits are earned through smart building technologies:
- EA Credit: Optimize Energy Performance — energy simulation modeling or ENERGY STAR score; implementing ASHRAE Guideline 36 sequences
- EA Credit: Advanced Energy Metering — whole-building and subsystem energy metering with 15-minute data logged for at least 36 months
- IEQ Credit: Enhanced Indoor Air Quality Strategies — CO₂ monitoring with BMS integration for DCV
- EA Credit: Demand Response — participating in a utility DR program
- IEQ Credit: Quality Views and Daylight — daylight harvesting controls that respond to natural light levels
The Business Case
Studies consistently show LEED-certified buildings achieve 3–7% higher rents, 15–20% lower vacancy rates, and 7–14% higher sale prices compared to non-certified comparable properties. ENERGY STAR certification alone correlates with 3–5% rent premiums in major commercial markets. The combination of energy cost savings (often 20–30% below baseline) and market premium makes green building certification a compelling investment for most commercial owners.