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Risks for a Sustainable Future (or How Eeyore Would See Green Construction)

by Christopher Hill

Eeyore via Polyvore

I am sitting here looking out at a wet, dark and windy day here in Richmond, VA.  In many ways I can relate to the clouds.  As an attorney I almost always feel like I am raining on the “sustainable building” parade.  On Build2Sustain conference calls, I always feel like I’m the one saying “whoa” we need to think about the liability.

As I’ve said at Musings before, Eeyore is one of my favorite characters from A. A. Milne.  Eeyore, you may remember, is the donkey on whom it’s always raining.  He is the loveable character that always feels like the sky is falling, but plugs along anyway.

I can relate.  I am firmly committed to sustainable building.  I think that the economic impact, combined with the moral imperative, make such a goal both worthy and required.  However, certain risks are inherent in any new use of technologies and any new mode of thinking, no matter how worthy.   Some of the issues that will need to be dealt with by contractors, architects, owners and, yes, lawyers, are the following:

  • Insurance- the insurance industry is still catching up with energy related underwriting
  • What standard of care applies due to a green building claim?
  • Potential Trademark claims
  • Longer time horizons and contractual or government requirements on energy goals

I sometimes feel like we are rushing past these issues without the careful thought that we need to give such risks in our (understandable) enthusiasm.  I tell clients to plan ahead, but it is human nature to be overtaken with excitement at a new venture and the vision of a better, cleaner, world.  However, until these issues are hammered out (hopefully without litigation to have judges tell us what to do), this march to a sustainable future will be a slow one.

The government can only do so much through mandate.  The private sector must be ready to move forward and pour money into sustainability.  Without some assurance and possibility to at least manage these risks, project owners and builders will be justifiably wary.  The sooner the risks are at least out in the open, if not resolved, the sooner the private sector will get fully behind sustainable construction and building management.

Until then, Eeyore and I will keep plugging through the rain.

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Why We Will Save The World | :: aribra ::

I woke up this morning and went about my normal routine but today was different. I could feel it building inside me. A sense of hope springing forward as I began to think about the generational challenges we are faced with and why this generation, our generation is ready for them. I look at what we can do, and what we are already doing and I realize that we will overcome not just this economic crisis, for those come and go. But we will overcome the crises of education, of health care and of energy within our lifetimes. Before I start to sound like too much of a salesman for the current administration, I want to share why I think our generation-the new professionals are uniquely suited to the age we were born into.

A great post from my friend James Bedell of Build2Sustain fame. Check out the whole post to get your weekend off right.

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