Emmeline Luck
Username
Emmeline Luck
Proposer First Name
Emmeline
Proposer Email
eluck@neep.org
Proposer Last Name
Luck
Proposer Phone
(631) 806-0183
Proposer Job Title
Energy & Climate Associate
Proposer Additional Info
Emmeline (Emme) joined NEEP's Buildings and Community Solutions team as the Energy and Climate Associate in February 2021. In her role, Emme provides technical assistance to community stakeholders to help achieve energy savings goals that contribute to a healthy and sustainable environment. Emme supports projects related to residential labeling and benchmarking, equitable community decarbonization pathways, and high performance schools.
Prior to joining NEEP, Emme was the Policy Associate at the Southeast Energy Efficiency Alliance, a sister REEO organization of NEEP. There she reported on state, local, and utility energy efficiency policy and program developments and best practices. Emme graduated from Emory University in 2018 with degrees in Environmental Sciences and French, in addition to a Sustainability Management certificate through Emory’s Goizueta Business School. She is also a trained Climate Reality Leader and served as the first Director of Communications for the Atlanta Chapter of the Climate Reality Project for two years.
Proposed Session Description
This unique, interactive session will foster collaborative and creative problem-solving while sharing lessons from states and local jurisdictions pursuing implementation of building energy labeling policies. As a facilitator, NEEP will offer best practices from leading jurisdictions while guiding participants in understanding key components of program or policy development in order to best serve the needs and goals of a given community.
NEEP will present a situation faced by the residents of “Energy Town, USA,” which has a carbon emissions reduction goal but doesn’t know how to meet it. Participants will be given context points about Energy Town’s largely old and inefficient housing stock, the uptick in homebuyer’s interest in green energy features, the availability of home energy data and energy comprehension, demographics and levels of participation in existing utility programs, the local workforce, and more.
Small groups will undertake slightly varied scenarios of the presenting issue based on pre-selected interests; participants will collaborate to identify potential pitfalls and success strategies for their group. Small groups will address issues pertaining to the following focus areas: rental and low-income populations, university- or hospital-centric communities, extremely active local economies, electric vehicle infrastructure pilots, community-scale renewable projects, and more.
Why is this session important?
This session will support critical and innovative thinking in a collaborative setting that mimics real-world problem-solving scenarios in which there are many complexities and stakeholder groups vying for competing outcomes. This session tackles a variety of intersecting issues, including the impacts of inefficient housing and the lack of accessible and comprehensible data, engaging and empowering community members, utilizing utility offerings, maintaining a skilled workforce, and supporting the local economy. Understanding the intersectionality of building decarbonization, learning how to balance the needs of various stakeholder groups, and adaptive thinking are all necessary to create an efficient, healthy, and sustainable building sector.
Diversity and Inclusiveness
Context points around multiple energy equity issues will be introduced in each small group dialogue session. Some small group topics will focus on specific energy inequities such as concentrated populations with extremely high rates of energy burden, low-to-moderate income rental communities, historic communities of color located near dangerous energy generation byproducts, and more. Facilitators will encourage participants to think of the equity impacts of proposed solutions in all solutions and equity impacts will be addressed in all follow-up materials.
Learning Objectives
1. Effectively engage stakeholders of various backgrounds and professions for collaborative problem-solving that will facilitate the policy implementation process
2. Stimulate the local market and workforce by creating programs that optimize existing resources including utility programs and efficient product rebates while supporting contractors
3. Understand the key steps for creating an equitable building energy labeling policy for residential, commercial, and/ public buildings that best serves the needs of a community
4. Encourage end-user energy awareness, education, and action to support in-home comfort, health, and resiliency
Has this session been presented before?
No
Additional Comments
Submitted to NBI's Getting to Zero forum
NYC 2021 Areas of Focus
Target Audiences Level of Expertise
Level 2 - Some prior knowledge helpful.
Session Format
Workshop or skill-building session
Recommended Length
90-minute session
Strongest Content Connection - NYC 2021
Comments about your speaker roster
There will be no formal speakers - I (Emmeline Luck, NEEP) will present the scenario and process at the beginning and lead the facilitators and participants in conducting focused problem-solving efforts in breakout rooms before returning for close-out. Breakout group facilitator roles may be filled by NEEP and/or NESEA staff and/or partners.
Anything else you'd like to tell us about your session proposal?
Participants will begin together in one session for context-setting and process review before being sorted into pre-selected breakout rooms by interest area, where they will spend 45 minutes before returning to the main session. Each group will have a facilitator who may confirm or introduce additional context or data points to guide the dialogue. Participants will drive the dialogue and be encouraged to pose questions; facilitators will be prepared with guiding questions to use as needed. A volunteer will take notes and report out high-level lessons learned. After the event, NEEP/NESEA will share recommendations and resources for achieving building sector decarbonization and local economy stimulation through building energy labeling as well as notes and discussion questions generated in the session.
Reviewer 1
Boren, Michaela
Reviewer 2
Smits Anderson, Jodi
Curator
Royan, Monisha
Proposal #
132
Session #
102
Committee Decision
Accepted