The Washington State Energy Code (Code) is part of the State Building Code, which sets the minimum construction requirements for buildings in the state. The Code provides the minimum and maximum levels of energy efficiency for residential buildings and the minimum level of energy efficiency for nonresidential buildings. The State Building Code Council (Council) maintains the Code. Unless otherwise amended by rule, the Code must reflect the 2006 edition. The Code for residential structures preempts the residential energy code of each city, town, and county in the State of Washington unless the local jurisdiction's residential energy code exceeds the requirements of the Code and was adopted before March 1, 1990. The Council reviews, updates, and adopts model state building codes every three years. The Code must be designed to:
The Council must adopt a Code that requires buildings constructed from 2013 through 2031 to move incrementally toward a 70 percent reduction in energy use by 2031. The Code must consider regional climatic conditions. The Council may amend the Code by rule if the amendments increase energy efficiency in the affected buildings.
Residential and nonresidential construction permitted under the 2031 Code must achieve a 70 percent reduction in annual net energy consumption using the adopted 2006 Code as a baseline.
A reach code is an energy code that goes beyond the state minimum requirements for energy use.
Residential and nonresidential construction must meet the following energy requirements:
The Council must include exemptions for photovoltaic panel installation readiness for construction sites or buildings that do not have adequate solar exposure to justify the installation of solar ready measures.
The Council must define and include net-zero ready measures in the Code adoption process.
Cities and counties must enforce the Code for residential buildings or adopt the statewide residential reach code. The reach code may not exceed net-zero energy use. Any local residential energy code is preempted.
The Council must adopt by rule a statewide residential reach code for optional adoption and enforcement by any city or county. The statewide residential reach code must achieve the reductions in energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions required in the 2031 Code for residential buildings. The Department of Commerce must develop a proposal covering the technical provisions of the reach code and certain rulemaking documents. The Council must adopt the Statewide Residential Reach Code as an appendix to the 2021 Residential Energy Code to be effective by July 1, 2024.
The substitute clarifies that the residential and nonresidential energy codes that apply to residential and nonresidential construction are the codes that are adopted by the Council by December 1, 2031. New buildings must include wiring for electrical raceways and designated space for solar equipment for photovoltaic panels. The Council must include exemptions for construction sites or buildings that do not have adequate solar exposure to justify the installation of solar ready measures. Certain dates are clarified and adjusted. The Statewide Residential Reach Code must achieve reductions in energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions as required in the 2030 energy code rather than the 2031 energy code. The Department of Commerce must develop certain rulemaking documents in addition to technical provisions of the reach code.
(In support) The bill aims to reduce electricity and gas demands on utilities. It builds on a successful existing framework. Local governments have the option to reach a step ahead and adopt the residential reach code. The Statewide Residential Reach Code goes beyond the standard code as is currently allowed for commercial buildings. Input from stakeholders suggested one statewide reach code for counties and cities would limit the confusion of having multiple reach codes. Buildings last from 50 to 100 years, and The Legislature needs to plan for that lifespan.
The building sector is the second largest source of greenhouse gas emissions. Unlike other sectors, such emissions from the building industry are actually increasing. Buildings need to be energy efficient and minimize greenhouse gas emissions. State law already requires a 70 percent reduction beginning in 2031. This bill focuses on what is next and requires all new construction to achieve an 80 percent reduction in emissions and to be ready for solar panels by 2035. Additionally, the bill authorizes local governments to adopt optional reach code.
The Code is by far the most effective tool for buildings to be energy efficient. The bill would be simple to enforce and would add no work for the Council. Energy-efficient technology creates new jobs for workers and provides income and sales tax for cities. Business as usual is no longer good enough. The bill will impact the cost of building but the cost will be much lower than energy retrofits to existing buildings. Currently, cities are not permitted to go beyond state minimum requirements for energy use. This bill creates parity with the commercial building reach code by allows local jurisdictions to enact a residential reach code. There isn’t time to wait until 2050 to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
(Opposed) A primary concern of the bill is the timeliness. There was a proviso agreement for a Utilities and Transportation Commission study on natural gas reduction. The Legislature should prioritize the use of that data before making comprehensive changes. A Statewide Residential Reach Code leads to two competing codes for construction. The bill is overly prescriptive and makes assumptions about technology that are not verified. There needs to be more information to make changes work. A more stringent energy code should be tabled until the housing crisis is resolved. Builders are having problems getting supplies after the last building code update and increase in building materials. The new requirements would be difficult and costly to source and install. The bill might support reaching environmental goals but there may be consequences for first-time home buyers. There are concerns about how the requirements of the bill would impact system reliability and electric grid reliability.
(Other) The bill would not improve carbon dioxide reductions in Washington. The economic cap and trade system has already been adopted, and the purpose was to move away from an ad hoc sector by sector approach and focus on an economy-wide approach. The result is that even if this bill is not passed, the State of Washington will still meet its decarbonization goals by 2050. This bill adds nothing but expense. Western Washington is the worst place in the United States outside of Alaska for rooftop solar panels. The result of this bill will be all new construction wired for solar panels with only the wealthy able to actually install solar panels. Lower income families will be the ones paying without receiving any benefit.