Oil, AI Construction Towns, and the Energy Grid: What’s Shaping Housing This Week
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Watch This Week in Sustainable Building News to learn how energy volatility, AI expansion, and building policy creates new pressures—and perhaps opportunities—for housing. This is the news for the week of March 9.
The latest news pod just dropped, and it’s packed with information:
Oil recently crossed the $100-per-barrel threshold following strikes on Iran—an event that immediately sent ripple effects through energy markets. Here’s how it could reshape how homes are powered—and how much they cost to operate.
Much of the conversation around AI has focused on the massive energy demand from data centers. But another trend is beginning to emerge—a sustainability sleeper, if you will—that could turn into a housing opportunity.
Meanwhile, electrification—long considered a cornerstone of climate strategy in buildings—is running into new real-world constraints. Do we have a collision course between policy goals and infrastructure reality on our hands?
Across the country, state governments are moving quickly on energy policy, with a wave of legislation emerging in states like Colorado, New York, Arizona, and New Mexico. The direction isn’t uniform, but the pace of change is accelerating.
Plus:
New climate disclosure rules in California could reshape how companies report emissions and risk.
Building science experts are raising new concerns about performance claims in certain insulation products.
And innovations in mass timber manufacturing are pushing the industry toward new materials and lower-carbon construction methods.
For a special treat, watch a clip from a new episode of The Impact Series podcast: Mike Collignon sits down with longtime housing leader Bill Lazar to explore a deceptively simple question: Why does the industry still treat sustainability and affordability as opposing goals? Lazar’s answers challenge some of the housing sector’s most persistent assumptions.
Cati O’Keefe is the editorial director of Green Builder Media. She has 25 years of experience reporting and writing on all aspects of residential housing, building and energy codes, green building, and sustainability.
Oil, AI Construction Towns, and the Energy Grid: What’s Shaping Housing This Week
Watch This Week in Sustainable Building News to learn how energy volatility, AI expansion, and building policy creates new pressures—and perhaps opportunities—for housing. This is the news for the week of March 9.
The latest news pod just dropped, and it’s packed with information:
Oil recently crossed the $100-per-barrel threshold following strikes on Iran—an event that immediately sent ripple effects through energy markets. Here’s how it could reshape how homes are powered—and how much they cost to operate.
Much of the conversation around AI has focused on the massive energy demand from data centers. But another trend is beginning to emerge—a sustainability sleeper, if you will—that could turn into a housing opportunity.
Meanwhile, electrification—long considered a cornerstone of climate strategy in buildings—is running into new real-world constraints. Do we have a collision course between policy goals and infrastructure reality on our hands?
Across the country, state governments are moving quickly on energy policy, with a wave of legislation emerging in states like Colorado, New York, Arizona, and New Mexico. The direction isn’t uniform, but the pace of change is accelerating.
Plus:
For a special treat, watch a clip from a new episode of The Impact Series podcast: Mike Collignon sits down with longtime housing leader Bill Lazar to explore a deceptively simple question: Why does the industry still treat sustainability and affordability as opposing goals? Lazar’s answers challenge some of the housing sector’s most persistent assumptions.
To get the full context behind these stories watch the latest episode of This Week in Sustainable Building News.
Here are a few upcoming building industry events worth keeping an eye on:
By Cati O'Keefe
Cati O’Keefe is the editorial director of Green Builder Media. She has 25 years of experience reporting and writing on all aspects of residential housing, building and energy codes, green building, and sustainability.