Against a backdrop of government-mandated net zero emissions targets by 2050, the socio-economic drivers behind responsible and sustainable capitalism are greater than they have ever been. And yet in the real estate sector, which is widely understood to be both a major contributor and hugely vulnerable to climate change, there is little guidance on how owners and operators might employ effective governance to evaluate and address the environmental impact of their property.
To date, for all the column inches on sustainability and the very real appetite of private firms to adopt and deliver new standards in Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG), effective governance is patchy.
Plain vanilla regulation focuses on the production of Energy Performance Certificates (EPCs), and the subsequent impact of ratings on letting strategies. New rules on corporate reporting make mandatory the detailed reporting of energy usage, energy efficiency and greenhouse gas emissions for applicable corporates, while other property owners and investors have articulated, and sought to demonstrate compliance with, their own industry standards (such as GRESB benchmarking).
Yet as the available data in buildings increases, whether collected for industry benchmarking and/or reported by new technologies, there is increasing focus on the 'G'. And at the very forefront of the industry, owners, occupiers and their property lawyers are putting the jigsaw pieces together and prioritising effective governance as a key to the delivery of sustainable goals with green leases.
Good governance takes the data and frames the design and evaluation of a building's operation moving forward to meet targets. It manages the behavioural whims of occupiers and prevents an overly technical analysis getting in the way of practical environmental control.
Good governance supports a whole building system that collects and interprets robust data to generate an effective (and a cost-effective) response to environmental risks and targets in the short and longer term.
Understanding the new opportunities for data gathering is clearly key and in recent years technology has streamlined the way property is occupied, operated and even transacted. 'Bricks and mortar' has been, arguably, a slow adopter of the technological revolution, but there is no doubt it is currently making up for lost time.
As a category, 'PropTech' covers the activities of a large range of businesses busy at that interface where real estate meets technology and there are governance game changers if you look at the top trends in PropTech development. These include:
Where effective governance relies on these new tools, harvesting the data they generate is often dependent on the more tried and tested aspects of property management or, more accurately, the documentation that underpins use and occupation.
The rights and reservations existing in leases, for example, can dictate a landlord's ability to install new technology and gather data. In tenanted buildings, there are decisions to be made on costs coverage, service charge impact and potential rentalisation.
While the property industry pivots towards a greening agenda, there remains no such thing as a market-standard 'green lease' although green lease clauses such as those set out in the BBP toolkit would see landlords and tenants agree to co-operate on regular data sharing forums (while complying with data privacy requirements).
Helping to deliver on clients' ESG targets means understanding and enabling a building's practical and technological capacity for effective governance, today and in the future.
To discuss the issues raised in this article in more detail, please reach out to a member of our Technology, Media & Communications or Real Estate teams.
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