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Understanding Barriers and Evaluating Pathways to the Long-Term Viability of Federally Funded Energy Efficiency Programs
Abstract
In 2009, the U.S. Department of Energy allocated $508 million to the Better Buildings
Neighborhood Program (BBP), a competitive grant program to spur a private energy efficiency
retrofit market in the residential and commercial buildings sectors of the U.S. economy.
The BBP was funded through the Obama administration’s American Recovery and Reinvestment
Act, with the goal of creating jobs and impacting the economy through clean energy
investments.
This report investigates one of the BBP grant recipient partners, the Southeast Energy
Efficiency Alliance (SEEA), and the unique challenges of energy efficiency deployment
in the Southeast. The analysis provides SEEA’s program managers with a framework to
evaluate options for the long-term viability of their energy efficiency retrofit programs
post-federal funding in 2013. These options were designed as a deliverable to SEEA
in the form of a guidebook, which was completed in March 2012. Selected sections of
the guidebook can be found in the Appendix and will be referenced throughout the report.
Additionally, this report will consider the current barriers that SEEA’s programs
are facing and how they are impeding the organization’s likelihood of meeting goal
criteria within the mandated time frame. The final recommendations will include programmatic
changes that SEEA can adopt over the next year and a half to overcome both the short-term
and long-term challenges of energy efficiency retrofit programs in the Southeast.
Type
Master's projectSubject
Energy EfficiencyBetter Buildings Neighborhood Program
Southeast Energy Efficiency Alliance
Department of Energy
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/5352Citation
Fraser, Kathleen (2012). Understanding Barriers and Evaluating Pathways to the Long-Term Viability of Federally
Funded Energy Efficiency Programs. Master's project, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/5352.Collections
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