Supply House Times
  Home
  Subscribe
  Blogs
  Subscription Customer Service
  Updates
  Today's Top News
  Calendar of Events
  PVF E-News Archives
  B&K Pro E-news Archives
  Latest News
  Milestones
  Events Photo Gallery
  Web Exclusives
  Current Issue
  Cover Story
  Features
  Columns
  Products
  Industry News
  ASA News
  Industrial PVF News
  Bath and Kitchen News
  Resources
  Career Center
  Premier 150
  Water Info Library
  AEC Store
  Archives
  Digital Edition Archive
  Free Product Info
  Ad Index
  B.I.G. Book
  Manufacturers' Rep Locator Directory
  Digital Radiant Flooring Guide
  Classified Ads
  Radiant Flooring Guide Directory
  Radiant Heating Report
  Industry Links
  Market Research
  Showrooms
  Webinars
  Video Archive
  Special Collections
  Economics Week in Review
  Supply HT Info
  Media Kit
  Contact Us
Search in: EditorialProductsCompanies
EPA Finalizes WaterSense New Home Specification

December 11, 2009

ARTICLE TOOLS
EmailEmailPrintPrintReprintsReprintsshareShare



The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency released the WaterSense Single-Family New Home Specification, which works with other voluntary green building programs such as the National Green Building Standard, Energy Star and the U.S. Green Building Council’s LEED program. Under the new specification, builders can now become WaterSense partners and begin constructing homes to earn the WaterSense label.

Designed to use about 20% less water than typical new homes, WaterSense-labeled new homes will be independently inspected and certified by EPA-licensed certification providers. These new homes will feature WaterSense-labeled plumbing fixtures, Energy Star-qualified appliances (if installed), water-efficient landscaping and an efficient hot water delivery system.

Residential water use currently accounts for more than half of the publicly supplied water in the United States; about 1.27 million new homes are built each year. According to the EPA, if all new homes built in 2010 were WaterSense-labeled, it would save more than 12 billion gallons of water per year and the homeowners would save more than $130 million in utility bills.

Compared to a typical new home, a WaterSense-labeled home is said to save a family at least $100 per year in water, sewer and energy bills; compared to an existing older home, a family could save more than $200 per year on utilities.  Learn more about the 2009 WaterSense Single-Family New Home Specification at www.epa.gov/WaterSense/spaces/new_homes.html.


Source: EPA


Links

|PrintEmail

Did you enjoy this article? Click here to subscribe to the magazine.


















BNP Media
© 2010 BNP Media. All rights reserved. | Privacy Policy