More companies are prioritizing sustainability tech but face challenges implementing it
Insight
Can the sustainability tech boom help decarbonize real estate?
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Implementing tech successfully
As more businesses invest in sustainability technologies across their real estate portfolio, they’re grappling with the practicalities of integrating them.
One hurdle to the implementation of these technologies is that many businesses lack a concrete roadmap.
“Successfully integrating these technologies into real estate is a challenge faced by companies in every industry,” says Yuehan Wang, Global Research Associate, Real Estate Technology at JLL. “Even large companies may lack a feasible technology strategy that addresses how to make procurement decisions, ensure the tech is correctly used by employees, and scale it across a portfolio.”
The number of companies adopting data science and modelling tools, which are used to analyze occupancy, energy use and financial costs across buildings and locations, for example, jumped by 14% to 40% between 2020 and 2023, JLL’s survey shows.
Yet a lack of standardized data across smart building systems remains a stumbling block for many businesses.
To extract accurate insights about their real estate’s carbon footprint, companies need to merge information from various systems, from HVAC (heating, ventilation and cooling) to waste management. However, these systems are often siloed, making it difficult to integrate data, while companies may lack the tools or expertise to gather and analyze building data effectively.
“The hardest problem for real estate to overcome is the many data silos that must be integrated for buildings to operate efficiently, especially when some buildings may be 50 or 60 years old with outdated systems,” says Ravichandar.