§ 8253. Energy management requirements

(a) Energy performance requirement for Federal buildings
(1) Subject to paragraph (2), each agency shall apply energy conservation measures to, and shall improve the design for the construction of, the Federal buildings of the agency (including each industrial or laboratory facility) so that the energy consumption per gross square foot of the Federal buildings of the agency in fiscal years 2006 through 2015 is reduced, as compared with the energy consumption per gross square foot of the Federal buildings of the agency in fiscal year 2003, by the percentage specified in the following table:
Fiscal Year Percentage   Reduction  2006 2    2007 4    2008 9    2009 12    2010 15    2011 18    2012 21    2013 24    2014 27    2015 30.
(2) An agency may exclude from the requirements of paragraph (1) any building, and the associated energy consumption and gross square footage, in which energy intensive activities are carried out. Each agency shall identify and list in each report made under section 8258 (a) of this title the buildings designated by it for such exclusion.
(3) Not later than December 31, 2014, the Secretary shall review the results of the implementation of the energy performance requirement established under paragraph (1) and submit to Congress recommendations concerning energy performance requirements for fiscal years 2016 through 2025.
(b) Energy management requirement for Federal agencies
(1) Not later than January 1, 2005, each agency shall, to the maximum extent practicable, install in Federal buildings owned by the United States all energy and water conservation measures with payback periods of less than 10 years, as determined by using the methods and procedures developed pursuant to section 8254 of this title.
(2) The Secretary may waive the requirements of this subsection for any agency for such periods as the Secretary may determine if the Secretary finds that the agency is taking all practicable steps to meet the requirements and that the requirements of this subsection will pose an unacceptable burden upon the agency. If the Secretary waives the requirements of this subsection, the Secretary shall, as part of the report required under section 8258 (b) of this title, notify the Congress in writing with an explanation and a justification of the reasons for such waiver.
(3) This subsection shall not apply to an agency’s facilities that generate or transmit electric energy or to the uranium enrichment facilities operated by the Department of Energy.
(4) An agency may participate in the Environmental Protection Agency’s “Green Lights” program for purposes of receiving technical assistance in complying with the requirements of this section.
(c) Exclusions
(1)
(A) An agency may exclude, from the energy performance requirement for a fiscal year established under subsection (a) of this section and the energy management requirement established under subsection (b) of this section, any Federal building or collection of Federal buildings, if the head of the agency finds that—
(i) compliance with those requirements would be impracticable;
(ii) the agency has completed and submitted all federally required energy management reports;
(iii) the agency has achieved compliance with the energy efficiency requirements of this chapter, the Energy Policy Act of 1992, Executive orders, and other Federal law; and
(iv) the agency has implemented all practicable, life cycle cost-effective projects with respect to the Federal building or collection of Federal buildings to be excluded.
(B) A finding of impracticability under subparagraph (A)(i) shall be based on—
(i) the energy intensiveness of activities carried out in the Federal building or collection of Federal buildings; or
(ii) the fact that the Federal building or collection of Federal buildings is used in the performance of a national security function.
(2) Each agency shall identify and list, in each report made under section 8258 (a) of this title, the Federal buildings designated by it for such exclusion. The Secretary shall review such findings for consistency with the standards for exclusion set forth in paragraph (1), and may within 90 days after receipt of the findings, reverse the exclusion. In the case of any such reversal, the agency shall comply with the requirements of subsections (a) and (b)(1) of this section for the building concerned.
(3) Not later than 180 days after August 8, 2005, the Secretary shall issue guidelines that establish criteria for exclusions under paragraph (1).
(d) Implementation steps
The Secretary shall consult with the Secretary of Defense and the Administrator of General Services in developing guidelines for the implementation of this part. To meet the requirements of this section, each agency shall—
(1) prepare and submit to the Secretary, not later than December 31, 1993, a plan describing how the agency intends to meet such requirements, including how it will—
(A) designate personnel primarily responsible for achieving such requirements;
(B) identify high priority projects through calculation of payback periods;
(C) take maximum advantage of contracts authorized under subchapter VII of this chapter, of financial incentives and other services provided by utilities for efficiency investment, and of other forms of financing to reduce the direct costs to the Government; and
(D) otherwise implement this part;
(2) perform energy surveys of its Federal buildings to the extent necessary and update such surveys as needed, incorporating any relevant information obtained from the survey conducted pursuant to section 8258b of this title;
(3) using such surveys, determine the cost and payback period of energy and water conservation measures likely to achieve the requirements of this section;
(4) install energy and water conservation measures that will achieve the requirements of this section through the methods and procedures established pursuant to section 8254 of this title; and
(5) ensure that the operation and maintenance procedures applied under this section are continued.
(e) Metering of energy use
(1) Deadline
By October 1, 2012, in accordance with guidelines established by the Secretary under paragraph (2), all Federal buildings shall, for the purposes of efficient use of energy and reduction in the cost of electricity used in such buildings, be metered. Each agency shall use, to the maximum extent practicable, advanced meters or advanced metering devices that provide data at least daily and that measure at least hourly consumption of electricity in the Federal buildings of the agency. Not later than October 1, 2016, each agency shall provide for equivalent metering of natural gas and steam, in accordance with guidelines established by the Secretary under paragraph (2). Such data shall be incorporated into existing Federal energy tracking systems and made available to Federal facility managers.
(2) Guidelines
(A) In general
Not later than 180 days after August 8, 2005, the Secretary, in consultation with the Department of Defense, the General Services Administration, representatives from the metering industry, utility industry, energy services industry, energy efficiency industry, energy efficiency advocacy organizations, national laboratories, universities, and Federal facility managers, shall establish guidelines for agencies to carry out paragraph (1).
(B) Requirements for guidelines
The guidelines shall—
(i) take into consideration—
(I) the cost of metering and the reduced cost of operation and maintenance expected to result from metering;
(II) the extent to which metering is expected to result in increased potential for energy management, increased potential for energy savings and energy efficiency improvement, and cost and energy savings due to utility contract aggregation; and
(III) the measurement and verification protocols of the Department of Energy;
(ii) include recommendations concerning the amount of funds and the number of trained personnel necessary to gather and use the metering information to track and reduce energy use;
(iii) establish priorities for types and locations of buildings to be metered based on cost-effectiveness and a schedule of one or more dates, not later than 1 year after the date of issuance of the guidelines, on which the requirements specified in paragraph (1) shall take effect; and
(iv) establish exclusions from the requirements specified in paragraph (1) based on the de minimis quantity of energy use of a Federal building, industrial process, or structure.
(3) Plan
Not later than 6 months after the date guidelines are established under paragraph (2), in a report submitted by the agency under section 8258 (a) of this title, each agency shall submit to the Secretary a plan describing how the agency will implement the requirements of paragraph (1), including
(A) how the agency will designate personnel primarily responsible for achieving the requirements and
(B) demonstration by the agency, complete with documentation, of any finding that advanced meters or advanced metering devices, as defined in paragraph (1), are not practicable.
(f)  1 Use of energy and water efficiency measures in Federal buildings
(1) Definitions
In this subsection:
(A) Commissioning
The term “commissioning”, with respect to a facility, means a systematic process—
(i) of ensuring, using appropriate verification and documentation, during the period beginning on the initial day of the design phase of the facility and ending not earlier than 1 year after the date of completion of construction of the facility, that all facility systems perform interactively in accordance with—
(I) the design documentation and intent of the facility; and
(II) the operational needs of the owner of the facility, including preparation of operation personnel; and
(ii) the primary goal of which is to ensure fully functional systems that can be properly operated and maintained during the useful life of the facility.
(B) Energy manager
(i) In general The term “energy manager”, with respect to a facility, means the individual who is responsible for—
(I) ensuring compliance with this subsection by the facility; and
(II) reducing energy use at the facility.
(ii) Inclusions The term “energy manager” may include—
(I) a contractor of a facility;
(II) a part-time employee of a facility; and
(III) an individual who is responsible for multiple facilities.
(C) Facility
(i) In general The term “facility” means any building, installation, structure, or other property (including any applicable fixtures) owned or operated by, or constructed or manufactured and leased to, the Federal Government.
(ii) Inclusions The term “facility” includes—
(I) a group of facilities at a single location or multiple locations managed as an integrated operation; and
(II) contractor-operated facilities owned by the Federal Government.
(iii) Exclusions The term “facility” does not include any land or site for which the cost of utilities is not paid by the Federal Government.
(D) Life cycle cost-effective
The term “life cycle cost-effective”, with respect to a measure, means a measure, the estimated savings of which exceed the estimated costs over the lifespan of the measure, as determined in accordance with section 8254 of this title.
(E) Payback period
(i) In general Subject to clause (ii), the term “payback period”, with respect to a measure, means a value equal to the quotient obtained by dividing—
(I) the estimated initial implementation cost of the measure (other than financing costs); by
(II) the annual cost savings resulting from the measure, including—
(aa) net savings in estimated energy and water costs; and
(bb) operations, maintenance, repair, replacement, and other direct costs.
(ii) Modifications and exceptions The Secretary, in guidelines issued pursuant to paragraph (6), may make such modifications and provide such exceptions to the calculation of the payback period of a measure as the Secretary determines to be appropriate to achieve the purposes of this chapter.
(F) Recommissioning
The term “recommissioning” means a process—
(i) of commissioning a facility or system beyond the project development and warranty phases of the facility or system; and
(ii) the primary goal of which is to ensure optimum performance of a facility, in accordance with design or current operating needs, over the useful life of the facility, while meeting building occupancy requirements.
(G) Retrocommissioning
The term “retrocommissioning” means a process of commissioning a facility or system that was not commissioned at the time of construction of the facility or system.
(2) Facility energy managers
(A) In general
Each Federal agency shall designate an energy manager responsible for implementing this subsection and reducing energy use at each facility that meets criteria under subparagraph (B).
(B) Covered facilities
The Secretary shall develop criteria, after consultation with affected agencies, energy efficiency advocates, and energy and utility service providers, that cover, at a minimum, Federal facilities, including central utility plants and distribution systems and other energy intensive operations, that constitute at least 75 percent of facility energy use at each agency.
(3) Energy and water evaluations
(A) Evaluations
Effective beginning on the date that is 180 days after December 19, 2007, and annually thereafter, energy managers shall complete, for each calendar year, a comprehensive energy and water evaluation for approximately 25 percent of the facilities of each agency that meet the criteria under paragraph (2)(B) in a manner that ensures that an evaluation of each such facility is completed at least once every 4 years.
(B) Recommissioning and retrocommissioning
As part of the evaluation under subparagraph (A), the energy manager shall identify and assess recommissioning measures (or, if the facility has never been commissioned, retrocommissioning measures) for each such facility.
(4) Implementation of identified energy and water efficiency measures
Not later than 2 years after the completion of each evaluation under paragraph (3), each energy manager may—
(A) implement any energy- or water-saving measure that the Federal agency identified in the evaluation conducted under paragraph (3) that is life cycle cost-effective; and
(B) bundle individual measures of varying paybacks together into combined projects.
(5) Follow-up on implemented measures
For each measure implemented under paragraph (4), each energy manager shall ensure that—
(A) equipment, including building and equipment controls, is fully commissioned at acceptance to be operating at design specifications;
(B) a plan for appropriate operations, maintenance, and repair of the equipment is in place at acceptance and is followed;
(C) equipment and system performance is measured during its entire life to ensure proper operations, maintenance, and repair; and
(D) energy and water savings are measured and verified.
(6) Guidelines
(A) In general
The Secretary shall issue guidelines and necessary criteria that each Federal agency shall follow for implementation of—
(i) paragraphs (2) and (3) not later than 180 days after December 19, 2007; and
(ii) paragraphs (4) and (5) not later than 1 year after December 19, 2007.
(B) Relationship to funding source
The guidelines issued by the Secretary under subparagraph (A) shall be appropriate and uniform for measures funded with each type of funding made available under paragraph (10), but may distinguish between different types of measures [2] project size, and other criteria the Secretary determines are relevant.
(7) Web-based certification
(A) In general
For each facility that meets the criteria established by the Secretary under paragraph (2)(B), the energy manager shall use the web-based tracking system under subparagraph (B) to certify compliance with the requirements for—
(i) energy and water evaluations under paragraph (3);
(ii) implementation of identified energy and water measures under paragraph (4); and
(iii) follow-up on implemented measures under paragraph (5).
(B) Deployment
(i) In general Not later than 1 year after December 19, 2007, the Secretary shall develop and deploy a web-based tracking system required under this paragraph in a manner that tracks, at a minimum—
(I) the covered facilities;
(II) the status of meeting the requirements specified in subparagraph (A);
(III) the estimated cost and savings for measures required to be implemented in a facility;
(IV) the measured savings and persistence of savings for implemented measures; and
(V) the benchmarking information disclosed under paragraph (8)(C).
(ii) Ease of compliance The Secretary shall ensure that energy manager compliance with the requirements in this paragraph, to the maximum extent practicable—
(I) can be accomplished with the use of streamlined procedures and templates that minimize the time demands on Federal employees; and
(II) is coordinated with other applicable energy reporting requirements.
(C) Availability
(i) In general Subject to clause (ii), the Secretary shall make the web-based tracking system required under this paragraph available to Congress, other Federal agencies, and the public through the Internet.
(ii) Exemptions At the request of a Federal agency, the Secretary may exempt specific data for specific facilities from disclosure under clause (i) for national security purposes.
(8) Benchmarking of Federal facilities
(A) In general
The energy manager shall enter energy use data for each metered building that is (or is a part of) a facility that meets the criteria established by the Secretary under paragraph (2)(B) into a building energy use benchmarking system, such as the Energy Star Portfolio Manager.
(B) System and guidance
Not later than 1 year after December 19, 2007, the Secretary shall—
(i) select or develop the building energy use benchmarking system required under this paragraph for each type of building; and
(ii) issue guidance for use of the system.
(C) Public disclosure
Each energy manager shall post the information entered into, or generated by, a benchmarking system under this subsection, on the web-based tracking system under paragraph (7)(B). The energy manager shall update such information each year, and shall include in such reporting previous years’ information to allow changes in building performance to be tracked over time.
(9) Federal agency scorecards
(A) In general
The Director of the Office of Management and Budget shall issue semiannual scorecards for energy management activities carried out by each Federal agency that includes—
(i) summaries of the status of implementing the various requirements of the agency and its energy managers under this subsection; and
(ii) any other means of measuring performance that the Director considers appropriate.
(B) Availability
The Director shall make the scorecards required under this paragraph available to Congress, other Federal agencies, and the public through the Internet.
(10) Funding and implementation
(A) Authorization of appropriations
There are authorized to be appropriated such sums as are necessary to carry out this subsection.
(B) Funding options
(i) In general To carry out this subsection, a Federal agency may use any combination of—
(I) appropriated funds made available under subparagraph (A); and
(II) private financing otherwise authorized under Federal law, including financing available through energy savings performance contracts or utility energy service contracts.
(ii) Combined funding for same measure A Federal agency may use any combination of appropriated funds and private financing described in clause (i) to carry out the same measure under this subsection.
(C) Implementation
Each Federal agency may implement the requirements under this subsection itself or may contract out performance of some or all of the requirements.
(11) Rule of construction
This subsection shall not be construed to require or to obviate any contractor savings guarantees.
(f)  1 Large capital energy investments
(1) In general
Each Federal agency shall ensure that any large capital energy investment in an existing building that is not a major renovation but involves replacement of installed equipment (such as heating and cooling systems), or involves renovation, rehabilitation, expansion, or remodeling of existing space, employs the most energy efficient designs, systems, equipment, and controls that are life-cycle cost effective.
(2) Process for review of investment decisions
Not later than 180 days after December 19, 2007, each Federal agency shall—
(A) develop a process for reviewing each decision made on a large capital energy investment described in paragraph (1) to ensure that the requirements of this subsection are met; and
(B) report to the Director of the Office of Management and Budget on the process established.
(3) Compliance report
Not later than 1 year after December 19, 2007, the Director of the Office of Management and Budget shall evaluate and report to Congress on the compliance of each agency with this subsection.


[1] So in original. Two subsecs. (f) have been enacted.

[2] So in original. A comma probably should appear.