View by Topic
Recent Articles
-
29 Billion Square Feet of LEED Certified Space and CountingSaturday, November 16th, 2024
-
Voters Save Gas Stoves from Government Ban Portending More ..Saturday, November 9th, 2024
-
Ocean City and Others File Lawsuit to Reverse Offshore Wind ApprovalThursday, October 31st, 2024
-
Lawsuit Challenges D.C. Gas Appliance Ban and Net Zero Building CodeSaturday, October 26th, 2024
-
Lawsuit Charges Montgomery County Gas Appliance Ban is Preempted and VoidFriday, October 18th, 2024
View by Month/Year
“Green Building Law Update” Headlines
Recent Articles & News from
Stuart Kaplow’s blog
at GreenBuildingLawUpdate.com
- Transforming the Built Environment: LEED Green Building Hits 29 Billion Square Feet November 17, 2024
- Gas Stoves Saved: Washington Voters Reject All Electric Building Mandates November 10, 2024
- Maryland Offshore Wind Project Faces Legal Storm from Coastal Communities November 3, 2024
- Legal Showdown in DC: Lawsuit Challenges Gas Appliance Ban as Preempted October 27, 2024
Subscribe to the Green Building Law Update!
Stuart Kaplow brings his expertise and extensive experience to the table with his unique digital publication, "Green Building Law Update". Subscribers receive regular updates to keep them informed about important issues surrounding Environmental Law, Green Building & Real Estate Law, as well as the emerging demand for Environmental Social Governance (ESG).
Get fresh content through the lense of Stuart Kaplow's cutting-edge expertise, innovative commentary and insider perspective. Don't miss another issue! Subscribe below.
Recent Energy Star NextGen Articles
National Definition for a Zero Emissions Building
By Stuart Kaplow|2024-01-27T19:31:58-05:00Saturday, January 27th, 2024|Categories: Environmental Law|Tags: Ali Zaidi, Energy Star NextGen, Kaplow, LEED Zero, net zero, scope 1 greenhouse gas, Stuart Kaplow, zero emission, zero emissions building|
You can provide feedback on the draft national definition for a Zero Emissions Building. The White House Office of Domestic Climate Policy, through the U.S. Department of Energy, is seeking “to create a standardized, verifiable basis for defining a zero emissions building.” A broadly accepted common ...