Monday, March 19, 2012

Speaking "Green"


Speaking "Green"
As these groups and individuals seek ways to reduce the energy costs of homes, even more emphasis will be placed on eco-friendly designs and cost-savings. If you are a homeowner, there are steps—most are relatively easy—that you can take to make your home more energy-efficient; if you are a future home buyer, there are features and “green ratings and credentials” that you should look for in your future home.
Green-minded consumers seek agents who are knowledgeable about green real estate. You should not market yourself as a "green" REALTOR® unless you have done your homework, perhaps earned a green designation or two, and can walk the walk and talk the talk. Otherwise, your lack of knowledge will reveal your insincerity. While a green-built home may look no different than a conventionally built home, these transactions have their own unique lingo and consumer motivations. For instance, ferrying a client to a LEED® certified home in a Hummer takes us to our first word: Greenwashing--the practice of making an unsubstantiated or misleading claim about the environmental benefits of a product, service, technology, or company practice.
Here are some essential green terms that you should familiarize yourself with:

Alternative Energy: Energy derived from nontraditional sources (e.g., compressed natural gas, solar, hydroelectric, or wind).

Carbon Footprint: Carbon footprint refers to the overall carbon emissions created by a building, including its construction and operation.

Carbon Neutral: A claim made by some companies and developers to describe a building or product whose net carbon emissions are zero. This is very difficult to achieve and truly possible only if something doesn’t emit any carbon at all or soaks up as much as it emits.

Carbon Offsets: Carbon offsets allow people to pay money to fund a forestry project, renewable energy project, or research into renewable energy technology in order to offset their carbon emissions.

Fossil Fuels: Fuels including coal, natural gas, and oil that are used to generate electricity.

Going Green: Going green can relate to numerous parts of a person’s everyday life. From transportation choices to a home’s design features, going green can mean different things to different people, but its core theme embraces the idea of taking steps to reduce one’s overall impact on the environment. This can occur through reducing energy usage, recycling, utilizing public transportation, buying products locally, or designing or remodeling a home so that it is more energy efficient.

Green Enhancements: Green enhancements are changes and improvements made to a home that make it more environmentally friendly.

Sustainability: The World Commission on Environment and Development defines sustainability as “Meeting the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their needs.” In reference to building or business, it’s an approach that evaluates environmental, social, and financial factors equally.

Volatile Organic Compound (VOC): VOCs are organic chemical compounds that are emitted as gases from certain solids or liquids. They can have short- and long-term adverse health effects. In the home, VOCs are often found in paint, cleaning supplies, building materials, and furnishings.

Zero Energy Home: A zero energy home (ZEH) combines state-of-the-art, energy-efficient construction and appliances with commercially available, renewable energy systems, such as solar water heating and solar electricity. The result is a home that produces its own energy—as much as or more than it needs.

Alternate definition: Zero net energy homes use energy-efficient construction, equipment, lighting, and appliances with renewable energy systems to return or create as much energy as they take from local electric utilities on an annual basis, by using windmills, solar panels, or generators.
Need green real estate information in Marin County
please visit me at www.MarinBestHomes.com

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