Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 152— - ENERGY INDEPENDENCE AND SECURITY › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III— - ENERGY SAVINGS IN BUILDINGS AND INDUSTRY › § 17061
Defines key words used for federal programs about high-performance and green buildings. "Administrator" means the Administrator of General Services. "Advisory Committee" means the Green Building Advisory Committee. "Commercial Director" and "Federal Director" are the officials named in sections 17081 and 17092(a). "Consortium" is the private-sector partnership created under section 17092(c)(1). "GSA facility" means buildings GSA builds, renovates, buys, or leases for federal use (usually for at least 5 years, unless a shorter lease pays back costs); GSA can exempt some buildings under section 8253(c). "Federal facility" means any building used by the Federal Government. Other terms: "cost-effective lighting technology" means lighting that saves a lot of energy (for example, uses no more than 1 watt per square foot) or is on approved lists, and includes lamps, ballasts, fixtures, controls, daylighting, and similar tech. "Cost-effective technologies and practices" means tools or methods that cut energy, water, or utility costs (including geothermal heat pumps), meet section 8259b and FAR 23–203, and are at least as strict as sections 431–435 and title V sections 511–525 when those are tougher. "Operational cost savings" means lower operating costs from using these technologies or planting shade, measured against past use, enough to pay back added costs by the later of the dates in sections 431–434 or within 5 years for the technologies (sooner for geothermal), and does not include savings that would have happened anyway as the Administrator decides. A "geothermal heat pump" uses the ground or groundwater to heat or cool and must meet Energy Star rules on the purchase date. A "high-performance building" balances many qualities like energy use, safety, durability, accessibility, cost-benefit, productivity, and sustainability over its life. A "high-performance green building" does all that and, over its life, uses less energy, water, and materials; improves indoor air and comfort; lowers pollution and waste; uses greener products; boosts reuse and recycling; links building systems; cuts transport impacts by smart siting; and considers health and life-cycle effects, including worker productivity and materials impacts. "Life-cycle" means every stage from project idea through design, construction, use, repair, renovation, and final demolition or recycling. "Life-cycle assessment" is measuring environmental impacts from raw materials to disposal. "Life-cycle costing" adds up initial costs, replacements, operations (including energy), and maintenance over a study period and is shown as present value or annual value. The "Office of Commercial High-Performance Green Buildings" and the "Office of Federal High-Performance Green Buildings" are the offices set up under sections 17081(a) and 17092(a). "Practices" means the design, financing, permitting, construction, commissioning, operation, and maintenance actions that help reach zero-net-energy. A "zero-net-energy commercial building" is built and run to need much less energy, get the rest from non–greenhouse-gas sources, produce no net greenhouse gases, and be economically practical.
Full Legal Text
The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 17061
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73