Washington, D.C. tops this EPA list for second year

Washington, D.C. topped the Environmental Protection Agency’s list of Most Energy Star Certified Buildings for the second row in a year, the federal agency announced Wednesday.

The District of Columbia easily outranked other cities with its 686 commercial buildings that met the EPA’s energy efficiency standards. Runner-up Los Angeles had 527 buildings and third-place San Francisco reported 355 Energy Star-level facilities.

“Every year, more cities and buildings are turning to energy efficiency to protect the environment and strengthen their local economies,” Gina McCarthy, EPA administrator said in a statement. “Money saved on energy bills can boost the bottom line and be reinvested. The cities on this list prove energy efficiency saves money, improves our communities today, and helps us build toward a healthy future full of opportunity.”

To be Energy Star certified, office buildings, schools, retail stores, hotels and other facilities must be engineered to perform better than 75 percent of similar structures nationwide.

The report, in its eighth year, lists the 25 top metropolitan regions throughout the country and praises top-performing cities for incentivizing builders who have created sustainable models that subsequently consume 35 percent less energy.

The full list of cities and number of Energy Star buildings is below:

1 Washington, DC 686

2 Los Angeles 527

3 San Francisco 355

4 Atlanta 311

5 New York City 303

6 Chicago 281

7 Dallas-Fort Worth 249

8 Houston 231

9 Denver 215

10 Phoenix 190

11 Boston 157

12 Philadelphia 156

13 Minneapolis-St. Paul 131

14 Seattle 122

15 San Diego 120

16 Riverside 118

17 San Jose 114

18 Miami 104

19 Sacramento 103

20 Portland, Ore. 74

21 Charlotte, NC 71

22 Honolulu, Hawaii 69

23 Virginia Beach 63

24 Indianapolis 57

25 Austin 55

25 Louisville 55

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