Huge CO2 emissions reduction opportunity with commercial buildings retrofit finance

A new insight study from Siemens Financial Services (SFS) assesses the volume of carbon emissions building owners could save through energy-efficiency-as-a.service schemes.

Specifically, the paper estimates emissions for the world's four highest-volume emitter geographies Ð USA (71.35 MtCO2e), China (71.45), Europe (52.86), and India (14.91). Given these four areas are responsible for the majority of global CO2 emissions, this equates to more than 8% of global annual CO2 emissions reduction targets, as defined by the International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).

Renovating existing building stock to a zero-carbon-ready level is a key priority for achieving the sector's decarbonisation targets. However, rising inflation, hardening interest rates, increased fuel costs, and supply chain disruption are all factors negatively impacting adoption rates. The report therefore evidences the enabling role of flexible private sector financing arrangements to maintain crucial investment momentum, drawing on many real-world examples of implementation from around the globe.

Comprehensive retrofits of commercial buildings, including offices, hospitals, factories, warehouses, and educational establishments, can reduce their energy use by up to 40% but are not happening anywhere near the scale needed to meet climate goals, notes the report.

This is likely due to the considerable investment required to retrofit new technologies. That's where arrangements known as energy.efficiency-as-a-service are helping private and public sector organisations to retrofit the existing non-residential building stock in an affordable and cashflow friendly way.

These innovative financing schemes can secure operational cost reductions without putting pressure on capital resources, avoid putting capital at risk, and ensure expected savings are realised. At the technology component level, financing tools are available to help vendors and distributors add value with cash flow capabilities for their buyers.

For larger installations or systems, smart financing arrangements can be flexed and tailored to align costs with the rate of benefit gained from the energy efficient technology.

Toby Horne, Siemens Infrastructure Financing Partner, Siemens Financial Services, UK, commented: "With climate targets looming large, it's important we continue to support and enable the decarbonisation of buildings. Not only are they a serious contributor to global greenhouse gas emissions, if left unchecked these emissions are projected to double by 2050. Specialist finance solutions are intelligently designed to factor in savings, making them budget friendly enablers of the green transition."

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