President Clinton Announces Landmark Program to Reduce Energy Use in Buildings Worldwide
Four Multinational Corporations, Five Global Banks, and Sixteen
Cities Partner with the Clinton Foundation to Retrofit Buildings
and Reduce Carbon Emissions
May 16, 2007
New York, NY
President Bill Clinton today announced the
creation of a global Energy Efficiency Building Retrofit Program,
a project of the Clinton Climate Initiative (CCI). This program
brings together four of the world’s largest energy service
companies (ESCOs), five of the world’s largest banks, and sixteen
of the world’s largest cities in a landmark program designed to
reduce energy consumption in existing buildings.

Photo courtesy of David Scull/Clinton Foundation
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“Climate change is a global problem that requires local action,”
said President Clinton. “The businesses, banks and cities partnering
with my foundation are addressing the issue of global warming because
it’s the right thing to do, but also because it’s good for their
bottom line. They’re going to save money, make money, create jobs
and have a tremendous collective impact on climate change all at
once. I’m proud of them for showing leadership on the critical
issue of climate change and I thank them for their commitment to
this new initiative.”
Urban areas are responsible for approximately 75 percent of all
energy use and greenhouse gas emissions in the world. Buildings
account for nearly 40 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions,
and in cities such as New York and London this figure is close to
70 percent. The Energy Efficiency Building Retrofit Program will
provide both cities and their private building owners with access
to the necessary funds to retrofit existing buildings with more
energy efficient products, typically leading to energy savings
between 20 to 50 percent.
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Honeywell, Johnson Controls, Inc, Siemens and Trane will
conduct energy audits, perform building retrofits, and guarantee
the energy savings of the retrofit projects.
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ABN AMRO, Citi, Deutsche Bank, JPMorgan Chase, and UBS have
committed to arrange $1 billion each to finance cities and private
building owners to undertake these retrofits at no net cost,
doubling the global market for energy retrofit in buildings.
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These banks will work alongside energy efficiency finance
specialist Hannon Armstrong and CCI to develop effective mechanisms
to deploy this capital globally. Cities and building owners will
pay back the loans plus interest with the energy savings
generated by the reduced energy costs thanks to the building
retrofits.
- An initial group of sixteen of the world’s largest cities
has agreed to participate in the retrofit program, and offer
their municipal buildings for the first round of energy retrofits:
Bangkok, Berlin, Chicago, Houston, Johannesburg, Karachi, London,
Melbourne, Mexico City, Mumbai, New York, Rome, Sao Paulo, Seoul, Tokyo,
and Toronto.
As part of the Energy Efficiency Building Retrofit Program, cities
have agreed to develop a program to make their municipal buildings
more energy efficient and provide incentives for private building
owners to retrofit their buildings with energy saving technologies.
The retrofit program will be consistent with, and work within, city
procurement and tendering rules. Participation in the program will
be open to local banks and companies, who will be invited to
contribute to the funding pool and to expand the list of green
products used in retrofits. This is the first of many programs
that CCI is organizing with partner cities in the C40 Large Cities
Climate Leadership Group, an association of large cities that have
agreed to work together to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions.
“Mayors are responsible for coming up with pragmatic solutions and
implementing them effectively – and this program will allow us to
do that,” said New York City Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg. “We’ve
laid out an ambitious agenda to reduce our carbon emissions, 80
percent of which come from buildings, while being economically
competitive and continuing to grow. By bringing together cities
and partnering with the private sector, President Clinton and the
Clinton Foundation are providing the tools to help cities accomplish
our goals. I applaud their leadership and am proud to stand with our
partners today.”
Mayor of London Ken Livingstone, Chair of the C40, said: “The C40
brings together the world’s most significant cities to tackle
climate change. This first program to come out of our partnership
with the Clinton Climate Initiative is a considerable breakthrough.
This procurement alliance will make it financially feasible for
cities to radically cut emissions from buildings. Fifteen cities
have already signed up to take advantage of this initiative and I
am confident many more will follow. National governments still
struggle to agree a way forward on global warming, but cities, which
are responsible for around three quarters of global greenhouse gas
emissions, are today demonstrating the leadership and decisive action
necessary to prevent catastrophic climate change.”
CCI and its partners will also assist participating cities with their
initiation and development of programs to train local workers on the
installation and maintenance of energy saving and clean energy products.
The U.S. Green Building Council and the American Society of Heating,
Refrigerating and Air Conditioning Engineers have agreed to help
coordinate these programs.
Listen to the press conference (mp3 - 13mb).
Downloadable Documents:
>>Download Fact Sheet (pdf)
>>Download Q&A (pdf)
About the Clinton Climate Initiative
Building on his long-term commitment to preserving the environment,
President Clinton launched the Clinton Foundation’s Climate Initiative
in August 2006 with the mission of applying the Foundation’s
business-oriented approach to the fight against climate change in
practical, measurable, and significant ways. In its first phase, CCI
is working with the C40 Large Cities Climate Leadership Group to
accelerate efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. CCI team members
have visited nearly all of these cities and are working with them to
define projects and take action.
The C40 Large Cities Climate Leadership Group is comprised of the
following cities: Addis Ababa, Bangkok, Beijing, Berlin, Bogotá,
Buenos Aires, Cairo, Caracas, Chicago, Delhi, Dhaka, Hanoi, Hong Kong,
Houston, Istanbul, Jakarta, Johannesburg, Karachi, Lagos, Lima, London,
Los Angeles, Madrid, Manila, Melbourne, Mexico City, Moscow, Mumbai,
New York, Paris, Philadelphia, Rio de Janeiro, Rome, Sao Paulo, Seoul,
Shanghai, Sydney, Toronto, Tokyo, and Warsaw.
For more information contact the Clinton Foundation Press Office:
press(at)clintonfoundation.org |