Naturalpath

  • NaturalPath Media
  • Member Directory
  • Our Publishers
  • Green Directory
  • Home
  • Sustainability
  • Eco-Tech
  • Style/Shopping
  • Healthy Living
  • NaturalPath Media

Hulk smash ... inefficiency!

May. 15, 2008 |

By Kate Sheppard

Ed Norton will go green -- literally -- next month when he hits the big screen as The Incredible Hulk. But on Wednesday he was on the Hill talking up the virtues of going green figuratively, in our building practices.

Ed Norton on the Hill.

Norton appeared before the House Select Committee for Energy Independence and Global Warming, along with experts in the green-building field, to talk about why building green is better for the planet and your wallet. Norton is a trustee for the Enterprise Foundation, which works to bring green building practices to low-income housing developments.

"The fastest way to make the most progress most quickly on climate change is by reducing energy waste in buildings," Norton told the committee. "The most cost-effective ways to do that are by retrofitting existing buildings, while the deepest energy and greenhouse-gas reductions can be made in new buildings as they come online. Major gains are achievable by applying what we know today."

(Norton isn't just a clueless actor, actually. In a 2005 interview with Grist, he spoke intelligently about environmental issues and his own work on green projects.)

Also at the hearing was San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom (D), who has been leading a crusade to have his city adopt the greenest building codes in the country. If his plans are approved by the city's Board of Supervisors, all new projects and renovations in the city will be required to comply with the strictest Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) standards by 2012. The city began fast-tracking permits for developers who voluntarily meet the LEED standards last year.

Buildings are responsible for 48 percent of all greenhouse-gas emissions, and it's estimated that 76 percent of all the electricity that U.S. power plants generate each year is used to keep buildings running. Yesterday's hearing was intended to examine the ways that efficient buildings and better building policies can both reduce energy costs and cut their contribution to global warming, and how government policies can support that transition.

  • Sustainability
  • Login or register to post comments
  • Feed: Grist Mill
  • Original article
Sign in | Register

NaturalPath Media's Blog

  • Most Executives Would Cut Pay to Support Green
  • Companies seeking innovative online green marketing can benefit from Yahoo!’s success & strategies
  • Marketers are Seeing Green
  • Soaring energy prices give green products a competitive advantage
  • Report shows growing importance of sustainability in the food, beverage, & consumer products industry

Latest Articles

  • New Flavors of Organic EnviorKidz Cereals by Nature’s Path
  • The Daily Five: Friday, 18 July, 2008
  • Mr. Gore, how do you feel about 90 percent?
more

Recent Comments

  • I have the worst allergies
  • I had gotten food poisoning
  • function pr_swfver(){ var
  • go slow with the cleanse
  • I have yet to try cleansing,
  • almost 100 years of master cleanse
  • 15 years of master cleanser experience
more

Navigation

  • Community Forums
  • Feedback
  • Invite your friends and colleagues
  • create content
About NaturalPath | TOS | Disclaimer | Privacy and Policies | Help | Advertise (NaturalPath Media)
Copyright 2008 Lark Media, Inc. All rights reserved. Naturalpath.com does not provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. See additional information.