Jim Benney Encourages Glazing Industry
to Consider the Big Picture When it Comes to NFRC's Proposed CMA
Program
Greenbelt, Md., September
13, 2007 – Jim
Benney, executive director of the National Fenestration Rating
Council, told participants at Glass Build America earlier this
week that NFRC's proposed Component Modeling Approach should be
viewed as a useful tool that will help them keep up with trends
that are reshaping their businesses.
Speaking
at the meeting's Glazing Executives Forum, Benney said that code
changes, technological advances, and increasing concerns about
global warming and other energy-related issues are forcing the
construction industry to adopt more energy efficient products
and practices.
“The
direction the country is taking is very clear, and the companies
that embrace these changes are going to be the ones that thrive
in the future,” Benney said. “A uniform, independent rating and
labeling system for nonresidential fenestration systems will help
glazing contractors and other stakeholders take advantage of opportunities
offered by government and corporate initiatives.”
Benney
cited the Architecture 2030 ( www.architecture2030.org
) program, which envisions net carbon-neutral buildings within
25 years, and the National Association of Counties recent endorsement
of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's ENERGY STAR®
Challenge as examples of how public and private entities are embracing
energy efficiency.
“We
know that glazing contractors and other groups have some concerns
about CMA, and we pledge to work with all stakeholders to create
the most effective, and cost-effective, program possible,” Benney
said.
For
more information about the CMA program, visit the NFRC Web site
at www.nfrc.org . The program
will also be discussed at the next NFRC meeting, which will take
place Nov. 5-8 at the Tempe
Mission Palms Hotel & Conference Center in Tempe , Ariz.
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