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Two Paths to Transforming Markets through Public Sector Energy Efficiency: Bottom Up vs. Top DownLaura Van Wie McGrory, Philip Coleman, David Fridley, and Jeffrey Harris, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory KeywordsAbstractThe evolution of government purchasing initiatives in Mexico and China, part of the PEPS (Promoting an Energy-efficient Public Sector) program, demonstrates the need for flexibility in designing energy-efficiency strategies in the public sector. Several years of pursuing a top-down (federally led) strategy in Mexico produced few results, and it was not until the program was restructured in 2004 to focus on municipal-level purchasing that the program gained momentum. Today, a new partnership with the Mexican federal government is leading to an intergovernmental initiative with strong support at the federal level. By contrast, the PEPS purchasing initiative in China was successfully initiated and led at the central government level with strategic support from international experts. The very different success trajectories in these two countries provide valuable lessons for designing country-specific public sector energy-efficiency initiatives. Enabling conditions for any successful public sector purchasing initiative include the existence of mandatory energyefficiency performance standards, an effective energy-efficiency endorsement labeling program, an immediate need for energy conservation, a simple pilot phase (focusing on a limited number of strategically chosen products), and specialized technical assistance. Top-down purchasing programs are likely to be more successful where there is high-level political endorsement and a national procurement law in place, supported by a network of trained purchasers. Bottom-up PaperDownload this paper as pdf: 163_38.pdf Panels of the 2006 ACEEE Summer Study on Energy Efficiency in BuildingsPanel 2. Residential Buildings: Program Design, Implementation, and Evaluation Panel 4. Commercial Buildings: Program Design, Implementation, and Evaluation Panel 5. Utility Regulation and Competition: Incentives, Strategies, and Policies Panel 6. Market Transformation: Designing for Lasting Change Panel 7. Human and Social Dimensions of Energy Use: Trends and Their Implications Panel 10. Roundtables and Interactive Sessions: Learning by Doing | CalendarGreen ICT for growth and sustainability? Linking science and policy 03 – 08 Jun 201238th IEEE Photovoltaic Specialist Conference 04 Jun 2012Call for papers MILEN 2012 08 Jun 2012Call for Abstracts - International workshop on energy efficiency for a more sustainable world 12 – 14 Jun 2012IEPEC - International Energy Program Evaluation Conference 15 Jun 2012Call for papers - IIASA Conference 2012. Worlds within reach: from science to policy 20 Jun 2012Energy futures and civil society in the EU - building a low carbon alliance |