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CAGBC delegates say green supply chain has its growing pains

Don Wall
CAGBC delegates say green supply chain has its growing pains
DON WALL - Chris Henderson, president of Lumos Energy/Indigenous Clean Energy, hosted a session exploring the green building supply chain at the CAGBC鈥檚 recent Building Lasting Change conference.

There was a unique airing of grievances in Toronto recently.

Delegates attending a seminar on supply chain challenges in the green building sector recently were given the floor to air their frustrations with barriers they encounter, resulting in a respectful public venting session.

For seminar host , the give-and-take was further evidence that there is lots of energy coming into the sector, with lots of money to be made.

 

鈥楴ot moving fast enough鈥

The dozens of challenges raised are not intractable, he said, but they are difficult.

鈥淲e鈥檙e dealing with the way we build things, the way we operate buildings, the way we create businesses in the space,鈥 said Henderson, a prominent national commentator on energy transition.

鈥淲e鈥檝e got to be more assertive, and we鈥檝e got to move faster.鈥

鈥淭hat concerns me, that we鈥檙e not doing this fast enough. But what I鈥檓 encouraged about is, I see so many young people, people from different diversities and ethnicities and orientations. They just want to get there. And when I see that degree of personal commitment, I鈥檓 optimistic.鈥

The session, billed as Enhancing Business-to-Business Supply Chains for Low-Carbon Buildings in 新澳门六合彩开奖结果2023, was held during the CAGBC鈥檚 Building Lasting Change conference and presented by the .

BDC assistant vice-president Shannon Glenn told the delegates there are 155,000 small and medium-sized enterprises operating in the construction and retrofit sectors and that optimizing the supply chains will be critical to solving their challenges.

Key focuses identified for scaling-up will be the residential sector, along with commercial and institutional retrofits, and electrification, Glenn said.

Glenn said the BDC is moving to address five gaps: disseminating information and awareness; readiness and scaling up; ensuring there are the right skills and right leadership; boosting productivity and automation; and developing capital and consulting networks.

Henderson explained in an interview, 鈥淲hat we鈥檙e doing is creating a new decarbonization DNA. And when you鈥檙e doing that, you have to fit a lot of different pieces into a jigsaw puzzle. That鈥檚 what we heard today in the session. People may think that they got different issues, but no, they are all connected.鈥

Henderson said the green building sector is at the 鈥渁wkward teenager鈥 stage.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 what we heard in the session, is that the 44 or so people that were there were expressing different parts of that new economy. So they may be looking at one or two pieces of the jigsaw puzzle, but you need all sitting together to build that new economy.鈥

 

Seeking supplies stateside

Issues raised during the input session ranged from problems accessing the data required to undertake an embodied carbon analysis, to finding suppliers with triple-paned windows and balcony doors.

One participant said at the start of one project his firm had to instruct trades and subcontractors on airtightness while another, with an electrical engineering background, experienced a problem finding energy-efficient transformers.

鈥淣ow you have to look to the states or another country, and that adds to the cost of the overall project,鈥 he said.

One contributor said she is having difficulty addressing the 鈥渢ransparency of social equity within the supply chain鈥; another referred to capacity and said it鈥檚 difficult to scale up projects; and a third suggested there can be a disconnect between owners, consultants and contractors on pricing of some green products, with owners sometimes 鈥渟hell-shocked鈥 when they learn a new cost.

鈥淐hange ain鈥檛 easy, right?鈥 said Henderson. 鈥淚t鈥檚 hard to do. It takes more work, but what I also see is that people realize we鈥檝e got to get there. I think we鈥檙e now in the solution finding stage鈥 It鈥檚 people saying, 鈥極K, we鈥檝e got to figure out change. So let鈥檚 get doing that.鈥欌

Priorities to address should be scale and size, Henderson believes.

鈥淲e can鈥檛 deal with this one house at a time, or one retrofit at a time. I like the idea of multi-residential development.

鈥淎nd I think if we start to think about scale, there鈥檚 more money on the table, there鈥檚 more money to be made. And while it鈥檚 harder to do, there鈥檚 more dividend.鈥

There is no 鈥渕agic bullet,鈥 Henderson said, rather it is going to take collaboration and participants rolling up their sleeves to find solutions.

鈥淵ou can鈥檛 be saying, 鈥楽olve my problem for me.鈥 You鈥檝e got to be part of the solution.鈥

Follow the author on X/Twitter @DonWall_DCN.

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