For Immediate Release: September 11, 2024

WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW:

The California Energy Commission adopted the 2025 updates to California’s Building Energy Efficiency Standards (Energy Code). The Code update is estimated to save $4.8 billion in energy costs, reduce greenhouse gas emissions by about 4 million metric tons, and make homes and buildings more climate-resilient and comfortable.

SACRAMENTO – The California Energy Commission (CEC) today adopted the 2025 Building Energy Efficiency Standards (Energy Code) for newly constructed, renovated buildings, and certain other existing buildings which will produce benefits that support the state’s economic, clean energy, climate and public health goals.

As the state's primary energy policy and planning agency, the CEC updates these standards every three years to increase the energy efficiency of California’s buildings, and to lower their cost of operation. Energy efficiency also reduces emissions of greenhouse gases (GHGs) and other pollutants. Buildings are responsible for a quarter of the GHG emissions and nearly 70 percent of California’s electricity use.

“Most of us spend the vast majority of our time on this earth inside buildings. These spaces must provide the conditions for all Californians to strive and thrive; clean air to breathe; comfortable places to live, work and create; and resilience in the face of the accelerating impacts of climate change,” said Commissioner J. Andrew McAllister, who is lead commissioner for energy efficiency at the CEC. “The 2025 Energy Code extends California’s leadership in the creation of a built environment that embodies our innovation-based economy and expands use of the clean, cost-effective technologies upon which our sustainable future depends.” 

Graphic detailing what the 2025 Energy Code is expected to do.

The adopted 2025 update will be submitted to the California Building Standards Commission (CBSC), which is scheduled to consider it in December 2024. If approved by the CBSC, the new standards would go into effect on January 1, 2026, giving builders, contractors and other interested parties a year to gear up for the changes.

The 2025 Energy Code focuses on key areas:

  • Encouraging inherently efficient electric heat pump technology for space and water heating in newly constructed single-family, multifamily, and select nonresidential building types. 
  • Replacing end-of-life rooftop heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning (HVAC) units of a certain size with high efficiency systems including heat pumps, for existing retail, existing schools, and existing offices and libraries.  
  • Establishing electric-ready requirements for commercial kitchens and some multifamily buildings, so owners can more easily switch to cleaner electric cooking and water heating, when ready. 
  • Updating solar and storage standards for assembly buildings, including religious worship, sport, and recreation buildings to make clean energy available for onsite use while minimizing exports to the electrical grid. 
  • Strengthening ventilation standards to improve indoor air quality in multifamily buildings.

Each code update guides the construction of buildings that can better withstand extreme weather associated with climate change, lower energy use and costs, and reduce climate and air pollution. The 2025 Energy Code is projected to save $4.8 billion in energy costs over its lifetime and reduce GHG by about 4 million metric tons, equivalent to the annual energy consumption of over half a million homes.  

For more information, view the Fact Sheet and learn more at the 2025 standards webpage. Also, listen to Commissioner McAllister explain what the Energy Code is and what’s new for 2025, in this YouTube playlist.

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About the California Energy Commission
The California Energy Commission is leading the state to a 100 percent clean energy future. It has seven core responsibilities: developing renewable energy, transforming transportation, increasing energy efficiency, investing in energy innovation, advancing state energy policy, certifying thermal power plants, and preparing for energy emergencies.