On September 6, 2024, the Maryland Department of the Environment issued a notice reproposing the Maryland Building Energy Performance Standards (BEPS) aiming to implement a key provision of the Climate Solutions Now Act of 2022. That is, the prior proposed 2023 BEPS regulations have been withdrawn, and new 2024 BEPS regulations have been proposed.

While the full text of the reproposed regulatory action appeared in the Maryland Register on September 6, 2024, you can read it there at New Subtitle COMAR 26.28 – Building Energy Performance Standards for new Regulations .01 – .04 and withdrawal of the proposed 2023 Building Energy Performance Standards, or you can read this blog post explaining our comments on the new regulations, highlighting why they are constitutionally problematic and detailing their failure to appropriately implement the enabling statute.

Constitutional Violations.

There is much that could be commented on, however in the interest of efficacy in clearly communicating the complete and utter failure of these regulations to appropriately implement what was a careful balancing of interests by the Maryland legislature in the Climate Solutions Now Act of 2022, the regulatory scheme proposed by MDE is completely constitutionally barred. What is proposed is constitutionally preempted by the federal Energy Policy and Conservation Act.

The proposed regulations also violate the First Amendment when they will force individuals and businesses, as a consequence of merely being connected to utility service in Maryland, irrespective of whether or not they own a “covered” building to publicly disclose an inexact, misleading calculation of their greenhouse gas emissions. Such runs headlong into the Dormant Commerce Clause and violates broader constitutional principles, which will no doubt be the subject of federal court challenges to these BEPS regulations.

Key Issues with the Reproposed Regulations

It should be lost on no one that the enabling statute, the Climate Solutions Now Act of 2022 does not provide for any meaningful reduction in GHG emissions when it only seeks to regulate “net direct greenhouse gas emissions,” but these regulations risk irreparably harm the Maryland economy, without any meaningful benefit. Against that backdrop, we reproduce here only a dozen of our comments:

1. Government Missed the Deadline.  That the schedule for these regulations, “on or before June 1, 2023, the Department shall adopt regulations to implement ..,” as prescribed in the enabling statute, has been missed (.. by more than a year and nothing is yet adopted) is more than simply a little problematic for the real estate industry which thrives on certainty. To state the obvious, these regulations are only now proposed and will not be final until, at best, months hence, after building owners are mandated to begin collecting GHG data on January 1, 2024 (.. yes, retroactively), using methodologies proposed in those regulations. The prolonged uncertainty in implementing this sweeping program, when GHG emissions had never been calculated for government before, with regulations that will at best be two years late, is untenable to those regulated. Of note, the SEC has stayed its GHG reporting and California’s nationwide GHG reporting is being legislatively delayed. The hard dates for businesses to act as prescribed in the statute must be moved back, realistically by not less than 2 years.   

2. Portfolio Manager as Sole Benchmarking Tool.  In section 26.28.02.B.(10), the definition of the Benchmarking tool as the sole method to measure and report data as Energy Star Portfolio Manager is problematic for several reasons, not the least of which is measuring GHG emissions is a perversion of what Energy Star was created to do, and it does not do it well. At a minimum, there should be more than one way to measure GHG emissions when the overarching goal of this effort is to reduce GHG emissions. Additionally, if a building actually reduces its GHG emissions by 20% in advance of January 1, 2030, such should be in compliance with the law irrespective of some Energy Star score (that may or may not reflect any reduction in GHG emissions from 2022 or otherwise). If the expectation is that all covered buildings will have an Energy Star score of 80 or better by January 1, 2030, such is not what the statute contemplates and is simply neither practicable nor efficacious (e.g., an older structure in Baltimore City with an Energy Star score of 47 today, will never be able to reasonably achieve these targets, greatly disadvantaging the states older urban areas and their populations, while putting a finger on the scale in favor of Montgomery County with its newer taller suburban structures and affluent demographics).

Moreover, Energy Star scores are a moving target that are updated increasing over time, which is not something the statute permits. The misuse of Energy Star as other than a voluntary scoring tool also presents very real concerns about who owns the GHG emission data, including matters of confidentiality (see more on this below). Finally, as noted this benchmarking was not the purpose Energy Star was created for, so with the regulations devoid of a definition of “net zero net direct greenhouse gas emissions” will some yet to be disclosed Energy Star data extrapolations make that determination for buildings in Maryland? 

3. Rationing Energy Use.  The regulation of Energy Use Intensity is not authorized by the statute and the move in the proposed regulations to simply delay regulation of EUI until 2027, does nothing to cleanse the fundamental objection to the state government rationing electricity on a per square foot basis. Of great import, this misapplication of what the legislature authorized (.. and why the legislature put these regulations on “hold” and then prohibited budget dollars from being expended on matters of EUI, last session) what is proposed about EUI does not reduce net direct GHG emissions for covered buildings, what this whole body of law is about, but rather rations energy use putting a cap on how much energy a residential apartment or a hospital can use on a per square foot basis. Additionally, MDE’s choice to regulate “site” EUI as opposed to “source” EUI is simply wrong if, again, the overarching goal is reducing GHG emissions, because Maryland is and will remain a huge net importer of electricity (.. so, as proposed, this entire new regulation of EUI burdens Maryland covered building owners, but does nothing about the emissions from a coal fired electric generating plant in Tennessee that supplies Maryland buildings?).

Best left for another day is that the building activity site energy targets are crazy low and cannot stand. For example, compare the normative primary energy target to those in ASHRAE Standard 100 and see what a national standard describes as reasonable and still resulting in reduced energy consumption.

Most significantly, the statute simply does not authorize a penalty for failure to achieve an EUI “target” (.. that is, EUI is expressed only as a target versus other jurisdictions that have BEPS that regulate EUI but not GHG emissions). Overreaching to regulate how much electricity is used in a building is also regressive ignoring the embedded carbon in the built environment benefiting a building that stands empty, or for the fewest hours per week, and is not utilized to its maximum efficiency. (A Maryland county library official has articulated that the only way for his libraries to meet the requirement will be to operate fewer days and fewer hours each week.) But the real externality of this regulatory scheme will be an environmental justice problem making winners out of modern suburban buildings (.. think Montgomery County) and losers out of older urban adaptive reuses (.. think Baltimore City).

Particularly disconcerting is that this proposed regulating of EUI is that it is the worst form of apocalyptic environmentalism, with MDE articulating that unless covered building owners drastically reduce consumption, humankind with its growing numbers and appetite will overwhelm the planet’s ecosystems.

4. Who can Verify GHG Data?  In section 26.28.02.C., the requirement for “third party verification” of benchmarking reports is described, in part, and then referencing the Technical Guidance, is too narrowly defined including limiting that work to be done by engineers. Today, the federal government including other programs in EPA allows a broad breadth of professionals, and nationwide, it is attorneys at law who most often provide that type of verification (e.g., opinions of counsel on green bonds [including for Maryland state issued sustainability bonds], on Fannie Mae green project mortgages, etc.); and accountants supported by attorneys provide that third party verification in SEC matters and the like. The regulations should be broad including that attorneys, accountants, and others, who are already doing this work in the GHG space, can and should be authorized to provide those verifications in Maryland.

5. Tenant Owned Mechanical Systems.  The proposed regulations are devoid of the statute’s Environment Article, Section 2-1602, required “special provisions or exceptions” including for buildings where the commercial tenant installed, owns, and is responsible for the building energy systems. This is not a matter of environmental efficacy but rather does not reflect an understanding of how many covered buildings are owned and operated. This is a major void.

The regulation is anti ingenuity and rejects innovation when it does not include a provision, as required by the statute for allowances for the use of biofuels, does not provide for fuel cells, makes no provision for hydrogen power generation, does not touch on building carbon capture or for that matter any technology based solution.

6. Residential Condos.  Okay, not a comment on the regulations, but concomitantly to the comment above, Environment Article, Section 2-1602 should be expanded to address residential condominiums, coops, and the like (.. today, the statute only allows a dispensation for buildings with “commercial tenants”) where the law burdens the building owner, but where the building energy systems as well as cooking, hot water and laundry appliances are almost always owned and controlled by individual unit owners.

7. No Variances or Waivers.   The regulations do not include variance or waiver provisions and not only would such ameliorate the harsh effects of the law but could provide real and good alternative compliance paths as well as altered schedules to achieving Maryland’s ultimate net zero goals. Most similar building energy regulatory schemes across the country, including the model ordinance provided on the website of the consultant engaged by Maryland, include a variance process.    

8. No Allowance for Offsets.  The regulations do not provide for compliance by way of offsets. Offsets will be key for many buildings to be able to achieve net zero. Both the White House’s proposed definition of zero emission building and LEED Carbon Zero allow for offsets. By way of example, offsets through Maryland based organics recycling facilities including food waste based compost would allow Maryland businesses to do more to reduce their GHG and provide for flexibility in meeting the State’s requirements while allowing for ease in auditing. Of course, reducing food waste is another of the several of the aims of SB 528 of 2022, not only from the perspective that it is the single most common material landfilled in the U.S. but also results in more than 14% of total U.S. methane emissions and more than 8% of anthropogenic GHG emissions, offering an opportunity for meaningful reductions. The 2022 statute identifies pursuing organics recycling facilities, and offsets associated with using organics recycling, including food waste contributed to nutrient rich soil amendment and compost should be provided for in these regulations.

9. GHG Data Ownership.  Maybe most significantly of all of these comments, the regulations do not address who owns the GHG emissions data the State now demands be calculated, collected, and publicly reported, but worse the regulations pervert existing precepts of privacy and confidentiality provided for by federal and state law. The statute only provides,

“(D) ELECTRIC COMPANIES AND GAS COMPANIES SHALL PROVIDE ENERGY DATA, INCLUDING WHOLE–BUILDING AND AGGREGATE DATA, TO THE OWNERS OF COVERED BUILDINGS FOR BENCHMARKING PURPOSES.”

.. which verbiage in and of itself arguably does no harm, but does not attempt at allocating responsibility and costs between owners and occupiers of buildings when both are necessary participants to comply with this new body of law that only regulates ‘owners’. But then these regulations add section 26.28.02.02.04.A.

“(7) For covered buildings with fewer than five tenants, electric ..”

.. differentiating building occupancies and creating a bar for landlords from obtaining the required data from many tenants (including those with leases and renewal terms that stretch for years). If there is any one issue that must be addressed, this is it. Matters of accuracy, transparency, and incentives are key considerations for ensuring that this data is effectively used to address the challenges of climate change. Today, organizations must mitigate the risk associated with keeping their own data safe and this regulation must address that, but it does not. And all of that is before the dollar costs to landlords now being charged by tenants for providing that data and likewise.

10. EV Charging but No Backup Power.  Section 02.02.04.B(5), excluding electric vehicle charging from benchmarking is not authorized by statute and will not only result in a jaundice report (i.e., electric truck charging stations are huge users of electricity and more). If MDE desires to pick winners and losers in forms of transportation so be it, but don’t fudge the numbers on the energy truthfully and factually used at some buildings, but not others (e.g., that makes Portfolio Manager data less than reliable). The legislature chose to protect first floor restaurants, but it did not choose to protect electric vehicle charging. This should be deleted.

Similarly, backup power is a life safety issue mandated by building codes as well as a business necessity (from nursing homes to police stations, and highrise residential structures, etc.), especially as the grid becomes less reliable. Stand by and backup generators should be exempt from this regulation.

11. Sales Disclosure Requirements.  The entire new subsection 02.05. requiring disclosures before a contract of sale is entered into for a covered building is inappropriate, not authorized by statute, and could only negatively alienate the sale of real estate across the state. There is no similar requirement in Maryland law promulgated by regulation and not authorized by statute. And requiring a buyer’s signature on the addendum simply does not reflect the reality of how contacts are entered into, and real estate transferred. This provision must be deleted.

12.  A Penalty Disguised as a Compliance Pathway.  Chapter 04. Alternative Compliance and Special Provisions describe an alternative compliance pathway that is an excessive fine imposed and not what the legislature contemplated. When the General Assembly enacted SB 528 in April 2022, the social cost of C02 as estimated by the EPA was $51 a metric ton. Politics in Washington DC being what it is, as a result of a change of the party in the White House, the social cost of ‘greenhouse gas’ is now estimated at between $180 and $230 a metric ton; so to use that larger measurement (i.e., GHG versus C02) and higher dollar (not $51 but $230) and to add an annual CPI escalation on top of that is not what the legislature enacted, and is not supported by facts.

Conclusion

The proposed 2024 Maryland BEPS regulations fall short in several critical areas. The penultimate observation must be that the regulations risk causing irreparable harm to the Maryland economy (where nearly 90% of businesses and nearly 40% of residents are located in a covered building) without providing for any meaningful reduction in GHG emissions. That is, these regulations propose only to capture “net direct GHG emissions” from covered buildings which are a subset of all Scope 1 GHG emissions, that are less than 2% of a building’s total GHG emissions (Scope 3 emissions account for more than 90%) and the entire building sector may represent less than 29% of all GHG emissions with these ‘covered’ buildings being a subset of maybe 12% of all private Maryland buildings, but exempting most government buildings including schools; so not much in the way of GHG emissions are being reduced.

In the statute that is the Climate Solutions Now Act of 2022, the General Assembly found that “the State has the ingenuity to reduce the threat of global warming and make greenhouse gas reductions a part of the State’s future ..,” but these regulations do the opposite, and attempt to impose apocalyptic environmentalism on the State. Such is the polar opposite of what the legislature believed in making a techno optimism finding that ingenuity and science, properly applied, can help produce our way out of our predicament. These proposed regulations contradict the idea of employing ingenuity in the important work of reducing GHG emissions. The proposed regulations seek to ban natural gas appliances and force all electric buildings on the public.

Maryland has enacted the most rigorous state law in the country reducing GHG emissions and otherwise addressing climate change. Residents of multi family buildings and businesses alike can and should treat this as the greatest responsibility and opportunity of our time. But for such to be successful, substantial revisions to the proposed regulations are necessary and proper, including the ideas expressed above.

MDE will hold a virtual public hearing on the proposed action on October 9, 2024, at 1:00 p.m. You can join the meeting from your computer at https://meet.goto.com/522777173. You can also comment to MDE by that date to  BEPS.MDE@maryland.gov.

We are available to assist Maryland businesses in navigating these regulatory challenges, including providing turnkey services for GHG tracking and compliance.

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You may want to join BOMA Baltimore at lunch this Thursday, September 12 when I present “Decarbonizing Buildings in Maryland” explaining the new regulations. Details are here.