The 2021 EEBA Team Zero Inventory of Zero Energy Homes is Now Underway

The Energy & Environmental Building Alliance (EEBA) is embarking on the 6th annual EEBA Team Zero Inventory of Zero Energy Homes and invites all zero energy (ZE) builders, designers, architects, developers and owners to upload their projects to the database. 

The yearly report tracks ZE single and multifamily home trends and leaders across the U.S. and Canada. Currently, the Inventory includes ~28,000 ZE projects voluntarily submitted. 

As of the 2020 report, all projects are zero-energy ready and above, with the minority of projects listed in the Inventory are net zero or net producers. “The reality is that many homes, although they may not achieve that absolute goal, are designed as part of the larger movement towards zero energy, and we can learn from all of them. So, we included all of them,” the report explains. 

“Maintaining the Inventory is important because it sheds light on in North American ZE growth patterns, high-performance technologies used, as well as the major players who are adopting ZE design and construction as a profitable business model,” says EEBA’s CEO, Aaron Smith. 

The need for ZE housing is clear. According to the U.S. Department of Energy, U.S. homes consume ~ 21 per cent of the total energy used annually. As for carbon emissions, the average home releases 70 per cent more CO2 into the environment than a typical car or about 17,320 lbs. yearly. Thus, reducing home energy demand to net zero is economically and environmentally critical as well as achievable.

The EEBA Team Zero started tracking the proliferation of U.S. and Canadian ZE homes in 2015. Since then, the year-over-year report shows a consistent upward trend, with the multifamily sector leading the pack. “Multiunit developers don’t adopt practices that aren’t profitable,” said Smith.

Those interested in submitting their projects to the Inventory can go to https://teamzero.org/add-your-listing/. Those added before Feb 15th, 2022, will be added to the 2021 report.

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