RFP Magazine Article: Green finance breaks barriers for global real estate
The following article, written by Lisa Michelle Galley, was published in RFP Magazine, on 3 March 2010. RFP stands for “Real Estate, Facilities, Projects”.
RFP Magazine focuses on investment real estate across Asia.
The article published under the title “The Financial Barriers to Real Estate Can Be Overcome, Explains Lisa Michelle Galley”.
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Community officials, property owners and citizens are changing the world – working hard to extend regional social, environmental and commercial vitality. This is driving exponential growth in energy efficient and environmentally-certified (collectively called “greenâ€) buildings, since some people realize that green buildings are clearly better performing investments that release funds trapped in wasted resources back into the pockets of workers and local economies.
Yet, green building opportunities present major challenges for today’s financial sector. In Living Cities (2009), a collaborative of 21 global financial institutions, cities named a lack of funding as their number one challenge for developing large-scale green building programs. Commercial banks have difficulty with pricing energy savings as an asset. Investors are still getting comfortable with factoring water and energy performance into property pricing decisions.
To address these barriers, governments and private investors are combining green financial products with traditional ones, into systems of finance products and mechanisms, to introduce transparency about building performance into markets, and direct capital into and from green buildings.
These new financial solutions, organized at the district or community level, are implemented via public-private collaborations. Implementing these programs requires moving through a series of nested considerations from determining the interests of diverse stakeholders to structuring the right finance mechanisms for communities and investors as well as for reducing greenhouse gas emissions through day-to-day activities.
Understand the Interests of Stakeholders and their Markets
Financing green starts with understanding the real, often unspoken expectations of each stakeholder. Property investors need clear green investment cases. Home buyers seek to reduce their energy costs and ensure safe air quality for their children. City officials want to limit resource expenditure on public infrastructure.
Incorporating these expectations into any green finance assessment promises crucial insights. Participants can increase the impact of initiatives, since finance options are simultaneously compared to everyone’s interests and available opportunities. They also provide an early warning system about potential roadblocks, saving the time and money associated with creating financial solutions which were doomed from the start.
New Tools for Green Finance
Accelerating green buildings requires that communities and investors obtain capital for their projects. Below are a few new, popular and innovative green finance products that assist with both individual projects and large-scale transformation.
Green bonds: Socially responsible and ethical investors are a potent source of capital, but have traditionally shied away from investing in real estate, since it does not clearly align with their mission requirements. However, as a US$2.71 trillion market “on a missionâ€, socially responsible investors (SRI) are increasingly stepping up to partner with communities by buying green bonds issued by local governments that fund large-scale retrofitting of low income housing or regeneration of blighted urban areas. Recent examples include the EU-issued EUR1 billion in “Climate Awareness Bonds†in 2007. In the United States, bonds for ‘tax-lien’ financing, such as those issued by Sonoma County in spring 2009 and the upcoming GreenFinanceSF are growing in popularity, with more than 95 Californian cities either operating or in the process of establishing similar programs.
Commercial bank green loans and investment products: When a municipality implements sustainability initiatives, the continued access of businesses and consumers to credit services is often taken for granted. However, this as well as an adaptation of those products to better fit with the municipality’s sustainability objectives for buildings, is a critical area of analysis which often goes overlooked. As a result, many communities watch as sustainability initiatives falter, since they do not see sufficient private market credit and investment taking place. Often times, they fail to understand exactly how much credit for buildings actually comes from local banks.
When the South Korean government announced a national “low carbon, green growth initiativeâ€, several of the nation’s largest lenders, including Kookmin Bank, also announced their roll-out of many types of green financial services and products. The products not only cover residential and commercial green building loans, but also extend to industry with asset management, project finance and insurance.
Climate Benefiting Finance: Some communities and investors are even requesting green finance solutions that are sophisticated and scalable enough to transform the national economy. Introduced in June 2009 by the winning ‘c_life’ team in Sitra’s Low2No competition in Helsinki, Finland, climate benefiting finance is a replicable set of economic frameworks that will help to assure a private finance market that values green buildings. The frameworks consist of many interrelated systems of green financing mechanisms, all designed to price and deliver finance in a way that rewards carbon savings within businesses, real estate projects and the carbon-related behavior of private individuals. Here, the goal is to use finance to ignite profound change and diffuse new ways of thinking about sustainability.
Designing Green Finance Mechanisms for Impact
Molding green and traditional finance products together into a customized program sets the stage for finance that is truly aligned with driving sustainability.
First, stakeholders jointly analyze their situations and cross-educate each other about their individual risks of continuing business-as-usual. Second, the government will comprehensively assess the availability of incentives available to the building owner, to understand which ones most closely complement their objectives and those that conflict. Third, the initiatives’ attractiveness to private sector capital sources will be researched. Fourth, they will focus on needed partnerships with private financial institutions to assist the development of the loan products, that work best with program funds that public agencies may provide for green buildings.
From those evaluations, officials, investors, financial institutions and citizens can obtain a common understanding not only of their individual green business case, but also of the interrelationship of their success within the green initiative and the success of others.
Market-tailored tools such as investment and credit underwriting protocols for green buildings, benchmarking and metrics to measure property performance, as well as new monitoring and reporting regimes to assure feedback, will strengthen the initiatives’ success.
The gains of incorporating green finance mechanisms into sustainability initiatives are transparency and clarity. When everyone at the table is able to actively benefit, barriers fall and the complex dialogue becomes much clearer and simpler.
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Green finance workshops to sharpen your competitive edge
A few days ago, we announced the kick-off of a series of workshops focusing on green finance and investment issues via our newsletter, Pacesetter (sign up here). We are posting it here, to update those blog readers who get their news via RSS feed and might not have signed up for our monthly newsletter, yet.
The US Green Building Council Northern California Chapter and law firm, Hanson Bridgett, have generously co-sponsored the seminar series, titled The Competitive Edge: Financial Tools for Green Building Investment.
Why the Competitive Edge?
We want to help you add more value to your marketplace. We’re convinced that there is a real need in the industry to understand how to approach analyzing the value-add of green strategies within real estate investments. So we worked with the US Green Building Council Northern California Chapter and Hanson Bridgett to organize courses that address the core of those issues:
- how to use the LEED rating system when analyzing project cash flows (and move beyond first costs)
- common investment analysis issues and tools for retrofits
- an approach for structuring the investment review of new and existing green buildings
- how A/E/C professionals can learn common investment analysis processes and terms to improve communication with property owners about design, construction, and budget issues.
- what to consider when assembling a portfolio or fund of green investment properties.
We believe that green finance and investment techniques represent the next level of skills that real estate professionals need to stay current with changes in the real estate market place. ‘
Since sustainable design can change the economics of a building, and there are many ways to go about creating a green building, finance and investment professionals need to know a good, and efficient, process for incorporating this information into their decision making.
Below are a complete list of courses as well as links to registration. Also, you can sign up and join our Pacesetter list, which will contain updates on these courses, too.
Competitive Edge Course Summary
- Course 1, “Investment Analysis of Green Buildingsâ€, (March 3, 2010 - Register now) covers green investment underwriting skills that help professionals to quickly use the USGBC’s LEED-rating system in their decision-making. Full day seminar.
- Course 2, “Financial Considerations of Existing Building Retrofitsâ€, (April 7, 2010) addresses the financial considerations related to energy efficiency retrofits, so that professionals can integrate the additional decision-making tools and analysis for making buildings more energy efficient. Full day seminar.
- Course 3, “Understanding and Communicating the Financial Case for A/E/C Professionalsâ€, (April 28, 2010) gives architects, engineers and sustainability consultants an overview of the real estate investment analysis process, stressing how to use this information to ‘go beyond first costs’ in their conversations with owners about their green design and construction choices. Half day seminar.
- Course 4, “Raising the Bar: Green Investment Fund Strategiesâ€, (May, 2010 - date to be announced) walks the real estate senior executive through the business and legal aspects of assembling a portfolio of green property investments so that they can create more strategic advantages for their firms via creating pools of green building investments for the real estate market.
Instructors: I’m pleased to be co-teaching these courses with David Longinotti, Partner at Hanson Bridgett. Dave’s bio can be read here. You can check out my bio here.
To facilitate the best interaction, please note that seating is limited for all courses. Got any questions? Feel free to write us or call us at +1 (415) 655-6668. We’d love to see you there!
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Let’s meet at the Sustainable Industries Economic Forum
I am thrilled to be participating in the upcoming Sustainable Industries Economic Forum here in San Francisco!
Are you coming?
I will be part of a premiere panel including Paul Hawken and Phillip Michael Williams. We will discuss triple-bottom line investing in these challenging economic times.
Special request –> send me your burning questions and perspectives on the state of green finance and sustainability, and I’ll cover them at the Forum.
The current situation is a perfect storm that feeds off economic worry and unprecedented opportunity within green building and energy efficiency. That leaves lots of folks wondering, “what’s it going to take?” to move sustainability forward.
Send me a note or write a comment on this post about your thoughts, and I’ll try to work your perspective into the mix. I look forward to the dialogue.
Event Details
November 19, 2009
St. Regis Hotel, San Francisco
8am - 11:30am
You can sign up for the event here
Please join us for what is sure to be an enlightening and insightful event as we look to foster creative solutions for our evolving markets.
Related reading:
Things you might want to know:
- Do you like this post? We’d love to hear your comments and suggestions.
- You can contact us to discuss or initiate a project here.
- You can get Our Green Journey by email or via RSS.
- Sometimes you can see what we’re doing on Twitter.
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Use these metrics to measure your portfolio’s triple bottom line performance
Get this new research on metrics that helps you measure property triple bottom line performance.
We are pleased to share a new report titled, Metrics for Responsible Property Investing: Developing and Maintaining a High-Performance Portfolio.
You can download the report here.
This research was co-authored by Jean Rogers of Arup, David Wood of the Responsible Property Investing Center and myself. This is a working draft for comment that was presented today (4 November 2009) to a joint session of ULI’s Responsible Property Investing and Sustainable Development Councils.
Why do we need metrics for triple bottom line investing?
Our survey of the industry indicated that the spread of triple bottom line investing was being hampered by the fact that most currently available real estate sustainability reporting came from investors who would green a couple of showcase buildings in their portfolios. This lack of transparency leaves the broader real estate industry and capital markets with several pressing problems:
- They cannot determine if sustainability performance on the portfolio is improving over time.
- They do not know how the portfolio’s green performance compares with the portfolio’s of other investors.
- There is no way to judge sustainability risks hidden within any portfolio.
Drafting and road-testing proposed metrics with the Bay Area Council and TIAA-CREF
After developing a set of metrics that would represent the ten RPI principles in action, we worked with the Bay Area Council Family of Funds and TIAA-CREF to road test them, to obtain real world feedback from actual investor users.
Bay Area Council Family of Funds tested the metrics on recent acquisitions to see how the metrics might be useful during the property acquisition process.
TIAA-CREF tested the metrics on a portfolio of properties they own, to determine how the metrics could possibly assist them with asset management activities.
Both investors were also at today’s ULI session and provided in depth comments on the use of the metrics and their recommendations.
Key takeaways
Here are a few of our findings based upon investor feedback about their use of the metrics:
- RPI metrics do provide a tangible link to asset and portfolio value by pointing to possible decreases in operating expenses and/or increases in rental revenue.
- The use of RPI metrics can assist with opportunity finding: a key objective of due diligence during acquisition.
- The use of RPI metrics can help drive social responsibility within the portfolio, instead of just monitoring it after the fact.
We need your help!
This report is currently a working draft for comment. It was submitted to members of the Sustainable Development and Responsible Property Investing Councils for their review and comment. We would also appreciate hearing the comments and questions of real estate investors and practitioners within the Green Journey community.
Let us know your thoughts about these proposed metrics. Also feel free to forward this report to anyone in your network whose practice might benefit from the information.
We look forward to hearing from you and will keep you updated on this effort as it evolves.
You can download the report here.
Related reading:
- We’ve covered the emergence of responsible property investing many times before.
- You can also view a short presentation on the basics of responsible property investing here.
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Get plugged in:
- Comments about the metrics? Please write us and share your perspective.
- You can contact us to discuss or initiate a project here.
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- Sometimes you can see what we’re doing on Twitter.
Key events on energy efficiency finance and triple bottom line investing
Meet us at the the following events. We’ll be presenting about:
- energy efficiency financing
- responsible property investment metrics for high performance portfolios
- taking the green economy to the next level
In the weeks ahead, Lisa Michelle Galley will be featured at a number of key industry conferences. The topics covered by Lisa and other leading voices in the sustainable investment community will highlight the latest trends and provide a valuable forum to learn about innovative solutions to some of the most pressing challenges facing the green building and finance sectors.
Presentation on Energy Efficiency Financing
GSMI -The Sustainable Buildings Series: Retrofits
October 21, 2009; 11:15am – 12pm, Mission Bay Conference Center at UCSF
Lisa will cover the key considerations for different types of energy efficiency financing. From there she will talk about how owners can more effectively coordinate their energy efficiency financing efforts across their portfolios. Lisa will be co-presenting with Peter Liu of New Resource Bank.
Presentation on Metrics for High-Performance Portfolios
Responsible Property Investing Council: 2009 ULI Fall Meeting
November 04, 2009 – Joint session of RPI and Sustainable Development Councils
Moscone Center South, San Francisco
Along with co-presenters David Wood, of the Responsible Property Investment Center and Jean Rogers of ARUP, Lisa will offer fresh insights and recommendations developed in a year long study of the development and application of responsible property investing metrics on institutional real estate portfolios. Lisa and Jean will discuss how the real estate investment ‘system’ has been impacted by sustainability.
Taking the Green Economy to the next level
Sustainable Industries Economic Forum in San Francisco
November 19, 2009; 9:30am -10:15am
St. Regis Hotel, San Francisco
Lisa will join a panel of industry leaders including Paul Hawken, author and CEO of the Pax Engineering Group, to discuss some of the most challenging aspect of successfully implementing triple bottom line solutions and how we can take the green economy forward. The event will offer valuable perspective on growing strategic partnerships as a core aspect of sustainable business.
If you would like to meet us at any of these events, please email us info@galleyecocapital.com
News about future events is available through our website.
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Get plugged in:
- Sign up for our list on our green finance training page, to get info on upcoming workshops, which go deeper into the green business case.
- Do you like this post? We’d love to hear your comments and suggestions.
- You can contact us to discuss or initiate a project here.
- You can get Our Green Journey by email or via RSS.
- Sometimes you can see what we’re doing on Twitter.
- Photo credit: Flikr/manu chao by Michale.




