Performance warehouse
Performance MeasureMeasure #100814977Value #103239152

CITY BUILDING ENERGY USE INTENSITY

Percentage change in building Energy Use Intensity over the prior year average

A complete source packet for this Performance Portland measure: current value, official scale, history, narrative notes, context, and links.

1

Start with value

Use the latest official value and current trend as the first read.

2

Check why it matters

This performance measure shows whether the City is reducing the energy intensity of its buildings.

3

Use the source packet

Continue to the chart, official notes, topic links, source URLs, and full history table.

History

Official values

This chart uses the official actual values cached from ClearImpact. The latest point is highlighted; the table below preserves every raw row.

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Latest

-1.0%

FY 2024 - 25

First shown

-12.5%

FY 2019 - 20

Change shown

11.5%

Within visible history

-100%-50%0%50%100%FY 20-12.5%FY 21FY 22FY 23FY 24FY 25-1.0%X-axis: reporting period. Y-axis: official actual value on the ClearImpact scale.

Full source history

Every cached ClearImpact row for this measure.

PeriodActualTargetTrend
FY 2024 - 25-1.0%1
FY 2023 - 24-4.3%-1
FY 2022 - 2312.6%1
FY 2021 - 22-1.2%1
FY 2020 - 21-7.6%1
FY 2019 - 20-12.5%0

Narrative Tabs

Official Performance Portland notes

Why Is This Important?

This performance measure shows whether the City is reducing the energy intensity of its buildings. Even as the City grows, and its needs for office space expand, this measure tells us if we’re using that space more efficiently over time.

What Do The Numbers Show?

The data shows that the energy-use intensity of City-owned buildings has been mostly decreasing over time as Facilities replaces aging HVAC and lighting equipment and invests in other efficiency measures. Sharp decreases in FY 2019-20 and FY 2020-21 were due to the COVID-19 pandemic and associated work-from-home policies. Conversely, the increase in FY 2022-23 was due to post-pandemic increases in the occupancy of City buildings. While this measure tends to move in fits and starts as older buildings are renovated, reducing the portfolio’s energy use intensity by 2% per year on average will allow the city to meet its goal of zero emissions by 2050.

How Did We Arrive at These Numbers?

These numbers were calculated using information from the office buildings that are owned and operated by the Bureau of Fleet & Facilities. Only office buildings are included because they run during normal office hours, allowing us to externally benchmark their energy use. We took the total, annual energy use of each building in the form of electricity and natural gas, converted it into British Thermal Units (BTUs), and divided that number by the gross floor area of the building. That resulted in each building’s annual Energy Use Intensity. The average annual Energy Use Intensity of all buildings was then calculated and compared to the previous year’s average to estimate the percentage change. This data is collected and tracked by the Bureau of Fleet & Facilities, with the exceptions noted above. As the new form of government continues to be implemented, facilities management will be more centralized and it is likely that the City will be able to report the average annual Energy Use Intensity of all of its office buildings in future years.