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Carbon dioxide emissions reduction in the housing sector : Who pays the bill ?

Carbon dioxide emissions reduction in the housing sector : Who pays the bill ? . Andreas Pfnür, Nikolas Müller, Sonja Weiland . Milan, 24th June 2010. Agenda. Problem 2. Modelling of emission reduction and burden sharing Results Conclusion and outlook. Problem.

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Carbon dioxide emissions reduction in the housing sector : Who pays the bill ?

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  1. Carbondioxideemissionsreduction in thehousingsector: Whopaysthebill? Andreas Pfnür, Nikolas Müller, Sonja Weiland Milan, 24th June 2010 24th June2010 | Chair of Real Estate Business Administration and Construction Management| Prof. Dr. Andreas Pfnür | 1

  2. Agenda Problem 2. Modelling of emissionreduction and burdensharing Results Conclusion and outlook 24th June2010 | Chair of Real Estate Business Administration and Construction Management| Prof. Dr. Andreas Pfnür | 2

  3. Problem • Clean natural environment is a public good • Environmental pollution generates complex external effects • Housing causes 15 % of total CO2 Emission in Germany • External effects especially carbon dioxide emissions caused by residential heating and air-conditioning have to be internalised • Therefore residents in the European Union are living in a carbon-constrained world (e.g. European Energy Performance of BuildingsDirectiveEPBD) • Internalisation of the external effects comes at a cost, both politically and economically • Most common recommendation in environmental economics: polluters pay a fee based on the volume of pollution they create (polluter-pays-principle) • However, it is not always possible to identify the polluter • If possible, it is not always economical feasible to refinance investments in order to reduce greenhouse gas emissions • Needed: financial burden-sharing model between owners, occupants and the public • Analysis and data based on housing sector research project conducted within a climate protection commission mandated by the German government 24th June2010 | Chair of Real Estate Business Administration and Construction Management| Prof. Dr. Andreas Pfnür | 3

  4. 2 ways of modellingemissionreductions in thebuildingsector and burdensharing Building stock (in Germany) Deductiveapproach Scenarioanalysis(inductive) Break down the total (German) building stock in a technicaltypology Generate a sample of 25 mostrepresentative and demonstrative cases (scenarios) incorporateownership and housingmarketconditions Create 4 energyefficencyclusters (A-D) foronefamiliy and multistoreydwellings Define a characteristic/representativeimprovementcase per cluster Calculateprofitability and emissionreduction per case Calculateprofitability and emissionreduction per case/cluster Projection Projection Forecastemissionrecuction und burdensharing(based on status quo) 24th June2010 | Chair of Real Estate Business Administration and Construction Management| Prof. Dr. Andreas Pfnür | 4

  5. High technical potential, lowvolume of efficientprojects 41,27 Mt CO2 Technicalemmissionreduction potential at averagepresentlevel 13,39 Mt CO2 Volume of efficientprojectsconsidering simplifiedlandlord‘sperspective Therefromunderaverageconditionsprofitabile 178,09Bn€ Volume of efficientprojectsconsidering a specificlandlord‘sperspective 6,90 Mt CO2 Incorporatespecificmarket conditions, ownershipspecificgoals and ownershiprelatedcost of capital 124,5Bn € 24th June2010 | Chair of Real Estate Business Administration and Construction Management| Prof. Dr. Andreas Pfnür | 5

  6. Fromtheowners point of viewimprovementsaremorethanemissionreductioninvestments Ownersstandpoint: Improvementisinseperably „oneinvestment“ „non green“-valueenhancement Resolvemaintenancebacklog Isthere a chance of profitability? (firstDCF-Calculation) yes 11 of 16 clusters (69%) no Return on equityorurban returnhurdle rate of individualinvestorbeaten? no yes Istheindividualownerable to financetheinvestment? no yes Verifying Investment 56 % Refuse Investment 44 % But: Iselasticity of rentalmarketsufficient and aretenantswilling to paythebill? CO2-emission reductioninvestment 24th June2010 | Chair of Real Estate Business Administration and Construction Management| Prof. Dr. Andreas Pfnür | 6

  7. Refinancinginvestmentsistheproblem: Only a fewoccupants will / canpaythebill greenframedcases: improvement ist efficient 24th June2010 | Chair of Real Estate Business Administration and Construction Management| Prof. Dr. Andreas Pfnür | 7

  8. Improvementcosts, energysavings and interestratesaremost sensitive Improvementcosts Average rate of energypriceincrease (p.a.) Energy savings Interest rate 24th June2010 | Chair of Real Estate Business Administration and Construction Management| Prof. Dr. Andreas Pfnür | 8

  9. Implications: Politics has to decide! • 21 % CO2-Emmission reduction between 1995 – 2006 in Germany • Average improvement rate of building stock was 3 % p.a. • EU 30%-target for Germany should be achieved until 2020 • More technical potential of 41 Mt p.a. CO2-Emmission reduction p.a. • „Low hanging Fruits“ probably have been harvested • General economic hurdles reduce the technical potential of CO2-Emmission reduction. Remaining investments seldom pay off • Only selected housing markets can absorb the improvement induced rent increase • Investor-user-dilemma comes second. Cost of housing dilemma is the key problem to solve • Somewhere along the road investors will invest of their own accord (e.g. in case of heritage or building wreck off) sometimes also beyond economic criteria • To bring improvement investments forward can raise potentials, but... • ... significant increase of cost of housing will bring up significant social problems (rent increase between 1 and 4 Euro facing energy savings between 20 and 70 cent) • ... enforcing inefficient building investments by authority is against the law, furthermore it is an act of indirect expropriation of the owners • ... impossible without State subsidies 24th June2010 | Chair of Real Estate Business Administration and Construction Management| Prof. Dr. Andreas Pfnür | 9

  10. Conclusion and Outlook • CO2-emission reduction in the housing sector is much more an economic problem, then a technical challenge • To tighten Energy Performance of Buildings Directives ignores economic and social reality • Leads direct into investment backlog • Retards emission reduction in the housing sector • Owner-occupiers normally are in the best initial position for efficient improvement investments • Sustainable compromise between social, environmental, energy and economic politics is needed • Good example: local „climate pact“ in German state Schleswig Holstein. Voluntary agreement of refurbishment conditions between all relevant stakeholders 24th June2010 | Chair of Real Estate Business Administration and Construction Management| Prof. Dr. Andreas Pfnür | 10

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