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Climate Change Mitigation Efforts and the Effect on Doing Deals in the Commercial Real Estate Sector March, 2010 Abbi L. Cohen [email protected] John M. Ix [email protected] © 2009 Dechert LLP Overview 2 • Climate change in the U.S. increasingly has become the subject of litigation, proposed legislation, regulation and, most recently, SEC disclosure guidance. • Although it is too early to predict the full scope and extent of the impacts from these developments, industry sectors that produce or consume significant amounts of energy or use carbon-based products need to start planning for a carbon-constrained world. • Commercial real estate is reportedly responsible directly and indirectly for 35-40% of carbon emissions annually. • Those evaluating an acquisition or investment in commercial real estate will want to develop a basic understanding of the key aspects of the potential litigation risks, the proposed legislation and regulation of greenhouse gas emissions and the target’s energy profile in order to take into account, at least in broad terms, the potential direct and indirect impacts and, thereby, recognize related challenges and opportunities. 13752794 Global Warming Litigation • Attempts to impose limits on greenhouse gas emissions through means of private lawsuits – Lawsuits seek injunctive relief and/or compensatory and punitive damages claiming public/private nuisance, trespass and negligence. 3 • Until recently, courts have routinely dismissed these suits at the outset -- on “political question grounds.” • But recent executive and legislative actions – and reactions of two federal appellate courts -- suggest that future cases may get beyond this hurdle. • Significant obstacles remain for plaintiffs even if they do survive initial challenge. Global Warming Litigation: Recent Federal Appellate Cases Connecticut v. Am. Elec. Power Co. (“AEP”) – Relying on “political question grounds,” the District Court dismissed an action by eight states which sought to require multiple electric utility companies to cap and reduce their carbon dioxide emissions. – A two-judge Second Circuit panel reversed and remanded, holding that plaintiffs could sue defendants for creating a “public nuisance” through their emissions of greenhouse gases. 582 F.3d 309 (2d Cir. 2009). 4 Global Warming Litigation: Recent Federal Appellate Cases Comer v. Murphy Oil USA, Inc. – Relying on “political question grounds” and lack of standing, the District Court dismissed a class action by Mississippi Gulf Coast property owners which alleged that insurance and oil companies increased global warming thereby strengthening Hurricane Katrina. – A three-judge Fifth Circuit panel reversed, holding that plaintiffs had standing to bring claims for public/private nuisance, trespass, and negligence, and that the claims were not barred by the political question doctrine. 585 F.3d 855 (5th Cir. 2009). 5 Global Warming Litigation: Recent Federal Trial Court Cases Native Village of Kivalina v. ExxonMobil Corp. – Village of Kivalina, approximately 400 residents in northwest Alaska, sued multiple energy companies to recover at least $400 million in damages. – The Village alleged that defendants’ greenhouse gas emissions contributed to global warming, which caused the sea level to rise and destroyed parts of the village. – The district court dismissed the suit on political question and standing grounds, specifically rejecting the Second Circuit’s analysis in Connecticut v. AEP, which allowed similar claims to proceed. 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 99563 (N.D. Cal. September 30, 2009). 6 Global Warming Litigation: Where We Are Today • Massachusetts v. EPA, along with recent actions by the Obama Administration, Congress and EPA regarding regulation of greenhouse gases, has contributed to the re-emergence of climate change litigation. • Defendants in Connecticut v. AEP and Comer filed for a rehearing en banc, which could alter the outcomes. If petitions for rehearing en banc are denied, then defendants could file petitions for certiorari with the U.S. Supreme Court. Otherwise cases will move forward in district courts. • Plaintiffs in Native Village of Kivalina have appealed to the Ninth Circuit, which is considered to be a friendly forum for environmental plaintiffs. • Political question was only a threshold issue in these cases; plaintiffs in all of these cases will face a tough task in trying to prove causation. 7 The Legislative Attack on Greenhouse Gases • On June 26, 2009, the U.S. House of Representatives passed the American Clean Energy and Security Act of 2009 (H.R. 2454) (the ACES Bill, also commonly referred to as the WaxmanMarkey Bill). – The ACES Bill would impose a cap and trade program to reduce emissions by 3% below 2005 levels by 2012, 17% by 2020, 42% by 2030 and 83% by 2050. – Caps on emissions from individual covered sources would be based on emissions in specified baseline years. For example, • As of April 1, 2015, industrial, chemical and petrochemical sources that emit more than 25,000 tons of GHGs capped at 2014 emission levels. – Emission allowances would be allocated to covered sources and sold at auction. Excess allowances could be traded. Covered sources could bank or borrow excess emission allowances from other years. Covered sources could acquire “off-set” credits. 8 The Legislative Attack on Greenhouse Gases • On September 30, 2009, Senators Kerry and Boxer introduced in the Senate a counterpart to the ACES Bill, the Clean Energy Jobs and American Power Act. – Like ACES, the Kerry-Boxer Bill relies on a cap and trade program to reduce emissions. The Senate Bill proposes a 20% reduction below 2005 levels until 85% reduction is achieved. • In December 2009, Senators Kerry, Graham, and Lieberman proposed a framework for addressing climate change; the Bill is expected to be introduced by Spring recess. – Early reports suggest the proposed bill will include a national target for reducing GHGs with a customized approach for different industry sectors. – For example, the electric utility sector would likely have an emissions cap and the petroleum industry could face a fuel tax. 9 The Legislative Attack on Greenhouse Gases Building Sector Energy Performance • Both the Waxman-Markey and Kerry-Boxer Bills have proposals applicable to buildings. (It’s not clear yet whether Kerry-GrahamLieberman will include similar provisions.) The proposed building provisions vary in how they would be implemented, but, include the following: – Federal building codes for new construction • require states to meet federal standards • include energy reduction targets • commercial codes play a role – Retrofit program for existing buildings • both Bills effectively propose the same program, known as “Retrofit For Environmental and Energy Performance” • dollars made available to states • incentives are performance-based; more dollars, greater energy reduction 10 The Legislative Attack on Greenhouse Gases Building Sector Energy Performance – Labeling • Waxman-Markey Bill provides the following: – applies to new construction only – requires EPA to develop materials to measure and achieve building energy performance – states that adopt federal program would be eligible for funding through emissions allowances allocated for purposes of cap and trade • Kerry-Boxer Bill doesn’t address labeling although Senate Energy Bill proposed by Senator Bingaman does 11 The Legislative Attack on Greenhouse Gases Other Recent Legislative Efforts Regarding Building Energy Performance • On March 4, 2010, Senators Markey and Pryor introduced legislation to promote the installation of energy efficient renovations in commercial and residential buildings; the proposed “Building Star” legislation. – Two part approach through rebates and tax incentives, including: • rebates to building owners who install or implement energy-efficient building equipment materials, products and services during 2010 • incentives to be implemented by increasing the Energy Efficient Commercial Building Tax Deduction (26 U.S.C. 179D) from $1.80 to $3.00 per square foot 12 Federal Administrative Attack GHG Endangerment Findings • On April 2, 2007, in Massachusetts v. EPA, 549 U.S. 497 (2007), the United States Supreme Court found that GHGs are pollutants covered by the Clean Air Act. • As a result, EPA was required to determine whether or not emissions of GHGs from new motor vehicles “caused or contributed” to air pollution that may reasonably be anticipated to endanger public health or welfare, or whether the science is too uncertain to make a reasoned decision. 13 Federal Administrative Attack GHG Endangerment Findings • On December 7, 2009, EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson announced the following: – Endangerment Finding: the current and projected concentrations of six key, well-mixed GHGs in the atmosphere threaten public health and welfare of current and future generations. – Cause or Contribute Finding: combined emissions of these well-mixed GHGs from new motor vehicles and new motor vehicle engines contribute to greenhouse gas pollution that threatens public health and welfare. 14 Federal Administrative Attack GHG Endangerment Findings • EPA’s action did not impose any requirements itself; it is a prerequisite to finalizing EPA’s proposed GHG emission standards for light duty vehicles proposed September 15, 2009, likely to be finalized this Spring. • By regulating GHG emissions from light duty vehicles, EPA will trigger Clean Air Act permitting requirements under the Prevention of Significant Deterioration (PSD) and Operating Permit (Title V) programs for GHG emissions. • The Endangerment Findings were immediately challenged in the DC Court of Appeals. There are at least sixteen pending lawsuits challenging EPA’s findings. • There also has been significant Congressional activity to limit EPA’s authority to rule before Congress otherwise acts on climate change. 15 Federal Administrative Attack GHG Tailoring Rule • EPA proposed a rule on September 30, 2009 to “tailor” the applicability of the PSD and Title V programs to large GHG facilities emitting over 25,000 tons of GHGs in CO2e per year. – EPA subsequently announced that the threshold could be increased to 75,000 tons in the final rule. • Under the proposed rule, facilities with GHG emissions below 25,000 tons/yr of CO2e would not need PSD or Title V permits in most instances where EPA issues permits or states/local areas are delegated federal PSD programs. • If the tailoring rule is defeated, the 250 ton threshold for CO2e could result in some commercial buildings needing Title V permits. 16 Federal Administrative Attack Mandatory Reporting of Greenhouse Gas GHG Emissions • Final EPA Rule published in the Federal Register on October 30, 2009 • Requires reporting of carbon dioxide equivalents, including carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4), nitrous oxide (N2O), and fluorinated GHGs, including hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), perfluorocarbons (PFCs), and sulfur hexafluoride (SF6) (collectively, “CO2e”) • Applies to specified energy-intensive sources and sources with emissions at or greater than 25,000 metric tons of CO2e per year in combined emissions • Final rule does not require facilities to report electricity purchases or emissions from electricity consumption 17 Federal Administrative Attack SEC Guidance on Climate Change Disclosure • On February 2, 2010, the SEC issued an interpretative release on public company disclosure of climate change issues (the “Release”). • The Release identifies the following categories of information companies should evaluate for materiality and disclosure: – the impact of climate change legislation and regulation – the impact of climate change international accords – the indirect consequences of climate change regulation on business transactions – the physical impacts of climate change 18 Federal Administrative Attack SEC Guidance on Climate Change Disclosure • Consider legislative and regulatory developments for disclosure in MD&A • Review risk factor disclosure • Public reporting commercial real estate companies will need to consider their disclosures, especially if they have properties in weather sensitive locations or with significant carbon footprints. 19 State and Local Energy Initiatives • In the absence of federal standards, more than 100 states and local municipalities have taken action with respect to energy use and/or consumption in the commercial real estate sector focusing on disclosure of a building’s energy usage and efficiency. • California is widely viewed as the leader with California Assembly Bill 1103 (2007) which requires disclosure, as of January 1, 2010, of a building’s energy consumption history to prospective purchasers, tenants and lenders. – Utilities record building energy consumption in a format that is uploaded to Energy Star Portfolio manager. 20 State and Local Energy Initiatives • Other states, and municipalities like New York City and Washington, DC, also have focused on energy disclosure . • Washington, DC: “Clean and Affordable Energy Act of 2008” – requires energy benchmarking using Energy Star Portfolio Manager with staggered reporting based on square footage; larger privateowned buildings (i.e., over 200,000 sq. ft.) must report scores now • New York City: “Greener, Greater Buildings Plan” adopted December 8, 2009 – requires building energy rating and disclosure for public and larger buildings using Energy Star Portfolio Manager 21 Voluntary Energy Assessment and Certification Programs • There has been a proliferation of voluntary energy and sustainability benchmark and certification programs for commercial real estate. A number of green building industry standards are under development (e.g., Capital Markets Partnership). – The most well-known programs are EPA’s Energy Star Program (relied on by a number of state and local initiatives) and the U.S. Green Building Council’s LEED certification program. – One of the newest is the International Green Construction Code announced on March 11, 2010 by the International Code Council, the U.S. Green Building Council and others. – In February 2010, members of the coalition for Energy and Environmental Leadership in Leased Space announced development of a baseline Environmental and Energy Efficiency Attributes checklist. 22 Voluntary Energy Assessment and Certification Programs – There also is a draft ASTM Standard Practice (WK24707) being developed to give guidance on commercial building energy performance evaluation and reporting. 23 Doing The Deal • Although the specific questions we should ask an acquisition or investment target will necessarily depend on the specific property or company, and the scope, terms and timing of the evolving legislative and regulatory framework, most industry sectors are thinking about the effect of climate change and their energy profiles. • Prudent investors in commercial real estate, at a minimum, should be prepared to start the dialogue as well. 24 What Are the GHG and Energy Questions You Should Consider in Due Diligence? • What is the carbon footprint of the target property? – Does the property emit more than 250 tpy of CO2e and, therefore, is it potentially subject to Title V permit requirements if the EPA’s Tailoring Rule is not finalized or is judicially invalidated? • Does the location of the property render it sensitive to sea level rise, extreme weather or other alleged meteorological effects of global warming? – Impact on the acquirer’s SEC disclosures? 25 What Are the GHG and Energy Questions You Should Consider in Due Diligence? • Does the property comply with applicable state and/or local energy conservation codes? – Building codes? – Reporting/disclosure? – Labeling? • Is the property subject to mandatory energy efficiency disclosure? – California? New York City? Washington, D.C.? Other? 26 What Are the GHG and Energy Questions You Should Consider in Due Diligence? • Does the property comply with any voluntary energy performance information gathering/disclosure standards (e.g., LEEDS, Energy Star, International Green Construction Code, and/or Capital Markets Partnership)? – If so, how well did it score? • For new construction, was the building designed consistent with an energy efficiency target? • Will a building renovation or addition trigger a requirement to improve energy efficiency or require a retrofit? 27 What Are the GHG and Energy Questions You Should Consider in Due Diligence? • Has an energy audit to identify potential savings in energy consumption been completed for the property? – How was an energy baseline established? – How is progress measured? – What were the property’s electrical, gas and water consumption amounts and costs for the preceding year? – What improvements are required in calibration, operation and synchronization of existing systems? 28 What Are the GHG and Energy Questions You Should Consider in Due Diligence? • Has a retro-commissioning study been performed for the property? – Has it been implemented? – What is the process for ensuring maximum building system functionality? 29 What Are the GHG and Energy Questions You Should Consider in Due Diligence? • If the property is or will be subject to a lease, as between the landlord and the tenant, who is responsible for complying with energy conservation codes? • If the property is or will be subject to a lease, as between the landlord and the tenant, who will benefit from energy efficiency investments? 30 What Are the GHG and Energy Questions You Should Consider in Due Diligence? • Has there been any assessment of distributed generation of renewable energy, such as solar and wind, for the property? • Has there been any assessment of the availability of incentives, credits, grants or loans pursuant to the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 or otherwise to fund technological changes or energy efficient projects? 31 For More Information • Industry Standards – USEPA Energy Star http://www.energystar.gov/index.cfm?c=business.bus_index http://www.energystar.gov/index.cfm?c=business.bus_bldgs – USGBC LEED http://www.usgbc.org/DisplayPage.aspx?CategoryID=19 – ASTM Building Energy Performance Disclosure (All Appropriate Disclosure) http://www.astm.org/WorkItems/WK24707.htm – CMP Green Value Score http://www.capitalmarketspartnership.com/ – American Society of Heating, Refrigeration and Air Conditioning Engineers http://www.ashrae.org/ ASHRAE 189.1 – Core Energy Code (New Building Institute) http://www.newbuildings.org/codes-policy/energy-codes 32 For More Information – IECC http://www.internationalcodes.net/2009-international-energyconseravation-codes.shtml – Building Owners and Managers Association International http://www.boma.org/getinvolved/7pointchallenge/Pages/default.aspx – International Code Council Green Construction Code http://www.iccsafe.org/cs/IGCC/Pages/default.aspx – Green Globes http://www.greenglobes.com/ – Institute for Market Transformation – Benchmarking and Disclosure Program http://imt.org/benchmarking-and-disclosure.html 33 For More Information – Climate Neutral Business Network http://www.climateneutral.com/ • International – European Energy Performance of Buildings Directive http://www.epbd-ca.org/ http://www.diag.org.uk/key-information/key-documents-.aspx • State and Local Databases – Database of State Incentives for Renewable and Efficiency http://www.dsireusa.org/ – Council of Governments (DC) http://www.mwcog.org/environment/climate/about.asp 34 For More Information • General – Columbia University Climate Regulation Tracking Service http://www.law.columbia.edu/centers/climatechange/resources/epa 35