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Washington, DC - The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) today announced nine new energy performance contracting pilot projects that bring together U.S. and Chinese companies to boost the energy efficiency of buildings in China and reduce greenhouse gas emissions. A combination of clean energy retrofits and upgrades will save the selected facilities on energy costs over the lifetime of the contracts by making them more energy efficient.

The savings on utility bills created through the facility upgrades will be used to pay for the projects over the terms of the contracts, and the improved facilities will continue to save money and energy after the contract terms have ended. The new projects support the efforts of both countries to work together to address climate change as recently formalized under the Paris Agreement.

China and the U.S. have years of experience in energy performance contracting and have a tremendous opportunity to reduce energy and water use and cut greenhouse gas emissions. The American companies partnering with Chinese firms will benefit by forging new partnerships to market their clean energy products and gain additional experience operating in China. For these reasons, the U.S. Department of Energy and China's National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) are working together, under the U.S.-China Climate Change Working Group announced by Secretary Kerry and his Chinese counterpart in 2013, to scale up these contracting opportunities by promoting multiple technology retrofits, new contract models, third-party financing and stronger measurement and verification protocols.

DOE's Acting Assistant Secretary for Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, David Friedman, announced the projects today at the 7th annual U.S.-China Energy Efficiency Forum (EEF). The Beijing event, organized by NDRC and DOE, brings together more than 150 government, industry, and nonprofit leaders from the U.S. and China to discuss bilateral collaboration on energy efficiency and highlight cooperative efforts, including energy performance contracting.

EEF is the premier platform for senior U.S. and Chinese officials and industry to assess the progress of joint activities under the U.S.-China Energy Efficiency Action Plan. This plan was announced by Presidents Obama and Hu in 2009 with the goal of discussing emerging market and policy developments, and exploring trade and investment opportunities. The EEF has facilitated 30 institutional or commercial partnerships resulting in millions of dollars of trade and investment since the first EEF in 2010.

The U.S.-China Energy Performance Contracting (EPC) pilot projects were formally recognized today by NDRC and DOE for using a combination of innovative financing models, standard measurement and verification protocols, integrated systems approaches, and achieving at least 20% energy savings building-wide or at least 1,000 tonne coal equivalent (TCE) across retrofitted systems in industrial facilities.

The Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy works with private industry, universities, and national laboratories to accelerate the development and deployment of energy efficiency and renewable energy technologies that strengthen U.S. energy security, environmental quality, and economic vitality.