regionalpolicyforumsummit
 

Through its Regional Deployment Initiatives, NEEP develops and facilitates working groups and advisory committees that include sponsors and other invited participants from the six New England states, New York and New Jersey.

These organizations work together to increase the marketplace availability and adoption of quality energy efficient practices, technologies, and whole building solutions that minimize net energy use.


 

NEEP serves as an information resource for policymakers, advocates, and efficiency program administrators to support the adoption and implementation of public policies that advance the efficient use of energy in the buildings sector.

We accomplish this through policy research and outreach, and through specific projects such as building energy codes, appliance efficiency standards, and high performance buildings.

The Regional Evaluation, Measurement and Verification Forum (EM&V Forum) supports the development and use of common and/or consistent protocols to evaluate, measure, verify, and report the savings, costs, and emission impacts of energy efficiency.

The Forum's projects and activities include a mix of protocol development, research & evaluation and education/information access activities.

 

NEEP's Northeast Energy Efficiency Summit brings together thought leaders from across the region in public policy, business, and consumer and environmental advocacy, to support the vision of energy efficiency as a solution to the challenge of reliable and clean energy.

Save the date for the 2012 Northeast Energy Efficiency Summit - June 13 & 14 at the Hilton Stamford Hotel in Stamford, CT! Check back frequently for updates!

NEEP Resources

NEEP's Policy Roundup Details Successes and Hurdles in Energy Efficiency across the Region


Check out NEEP's first-annual Regional Roundup, a new report examining overall trends and which states are leading and lagging in capturing cost-effective energy efficiency. [More]

What's New

2012 ushers in new efficiency standards for light bulbs. Make it a New Year's resolution to educate yourself.

January 1st marked the enactment of the new Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 (EISA 2007) which now requires that regular light bulbs use less energy. The light bulb standard has spurred innovation in lighting and given consumers more choices.  With the standards in place, it is estimated that the average household will save $100 per year on energy costs, every year going forward. [More]