Chicago, 5 May 2010
Leading firms that give greater attention to energy efficiency report billions of dollars in savings and millions of tons of avoided greenhouse gas emissions, according to the new report "From Shop Floor to Top Floor: Best Business Practices in Energy Efficiency" from the Pew Center on Global Climate Change.
The report was released at the energy efficiency conference in Chicago, which addressed key report findings, including The Seven Habits of Highly Efficient Companies.
These seven habits distill the elements of an exemplary corporate energy efficiency strategy into a set of core practices and principles. These are:
• Efficiency is a core strategy, and not just another sustainability "box" to check;
• Leadership and organizational support is real and sustained, all the way up to the CEO;
• The company sets ambitious energy savings goals, and has a clear plan for how to meet them;
• The strategy runs on a robust tracking and performance measurement system that allows decision makers to quickly identify problem areas and take corrective action;
• The organization puts substantial and sustained resources into efficiency;
• The energy efficiency strategy shows demonstrated results, meeting or beating prescribed energy savings targets;
• The company communicates energy efficiency results as part of the core "stories" the company tells.
Ends --
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