Snelle renovatie dringt zich op voor Europese kantoren

Om te voorkomen dat Europese kantoorpanden een ‘stranded asset’ worden, moeten ze dringend gerenoveerd worden, zo blijkt uit de grafiek van Fidelity International. De vermogensbeheerder bracht in kaart welk percentage van de kantorenmarkt in Nederland, het VK, Frankrijk, Italië en Ierland voldoet aan welk EPC-label.

Dat is van belang omdat er steeds strengere milieunormen opgelegd worden. De Nederlandse overheid eist dat vanaf 2030 alle commercieel verhuurde gebouwen een energielabel ‘A’ hebben. Dat zou betekenen dat de helft van de bestaande gebouwen niet meer verhuurd kan worden zonder beboet te worden.

Hoewel de kosten om een gebouw van score ‘D’ naar ‘B’ te brengen naar schatting rond de €500 per m2 liggen, loont het om vastgoed te verduurzamen. Volgens CBRE kan er zo’n 6 tot 8% meer huur gevraagd worden voor panden met een duurzaamheidscertificaat. Daarnaast kan het verbeteren van het energielabel met slechts een graad, de jaarlijkse CO2-uitstoot al met 30 tot 40% verminderen.

Hieronder vindt u het volledige bericht:

Chart Room: A regulatory cliff edge for unrentable European offices

New rules on energy efficiency are looming large over the European real estate market, with a huge proportion of office buildings likely to be unrentable in their current state by the end of the decade. While buildings are already being retrofitted to make them more sustainable, the pace must pick up for properties to avoid becoming stranded assets.

Europe’s real estate market faces the threat of most assets becoming stranded, or unlettable, if their energy efficiency isn’t improved through retrofitting in the next few years, due to regulatory updates coming to the region enforcing higher environmental standards.

In the UK for example, the Minimum Energy Efficiency Standards mean that from April 1 this year it will be unlawful to let a commercial property with one of the least effective energy performance certificate (EPC) ratings of F or G, while from April 2030 all non-domestic rented buildings must have an EPC rating of A or B. However, as this week’s Chart Room shows, currently only a quarter of existing office stock in the UK is of a standard to meet those 2030 requirements according to a study by estate agency Savills, suggesting three quarters of the UK’s office buildings would be left as stranded assets. With the UK’s office segment valued at around £263 billion as of the end of 2020, a back-of-the-envelope calculation suggests assets worth around £195 billion could become obsolete.

There is a similar story playing out in the Netherlands, where from January this year all office buildings required a Dutch energy label rating of C or higher and where from 2030 all commercial rented properties will need an A rating. While almost half of Netherlands offices are currently rated A+, A, or B, another 34 per cent have a rating of F or G or are unrated – and so can’t be leased without owners facing penalties for non-compliance.

But it’s not only the risk of holding stranded assets, sanctions, or fines that should be prompting building owners to improve the environmental performance of their assets. Although Savills estimates the average cost of raising an office’s EPC rating from D to B is around €500 per square metre, there is also a clear financial benefit for building owners: more sustainable offices can demand a substantial green premium, with rents around 6 to 8 per cent higher for properties with green building certificates and capital values around 14 to 16 per cent higher than average. For occupiers, meanwhile, green buildings can be far cheaper to operate, with savings made on energy costs on buildings with a better EPC rating outweighing even the higher rental costs of the property.

Of course, retrofitting real estate brings environmental as well as an economic benefits. Buildings in Europe are responsible for 40 per cent of the region’s energy consumption, and improving a building’s EPC standard by just one grade can represent a 30 to 40 per cent reduction in CO2 emissions per year. Given the carbon intensity of buildings in Europe, the stakes are huge.

Categorised in: Research, Vastgoed