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Commercial Buildings Energy Consumption Survey (CBECS)

2018 Commercial Buildings Energy Consumption Survey final results


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Based on the 2018 Commercial Buildings Energy Consumption Survey (CBECS), the estimated 5.9 million U.S. commercial buildings consumed 6.8 quadrillion British thermal units of energy and spent $141 billion on energy in 2018. Electricity and natural gas were the main energy sources. Space heating accounted for close to one-third of end-use consumption in 2018.
Data Tables
Consumption and expenditures report   PDF  PPT
Buildings characteristics report   PDF  PPT

CBECS Status

July 25, 2024

CBECS releases exploratory survey results about changes to office buildings following the COVID-19 pandemic

We conducted an exploratory, web-only survey to learn about changes to commercial buildings brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic. The results will inform questionnaire development for the next CBECS. Although the survey results do not represent all commercial buildings or all offices, we found patterns in the data related to offices. A new report, Energy-Related Changes in Office Buildings Following the COVID-19 Pandemic, describes those changes.

The number of people decreased in many of the responding office buildings, especially in large office buildings and office buildings with multiple businesses or organizations. We also observed changes in commercial building equipment that may affect energy consumption patterns.

December 18, 2023

2018 CBECS all-electric building estimates are now available

We have released a new set of data tables for commercial buildings using only electricity for certain end uses. These estimates may serve as a baseline for electrification policies and to understand the market for all-electric building technologies and equipment. More information on the new tables is available in a recent Today in Energy article. You can access the new tables from the FAQs for CBECS.

July 27, 2023

2018 CBECS building type reports released

CBECS covers a wide variety of building types—office buildings, schools, shopping malls, hospitals, churches, and fire stations, to name just a few—and each building type has unique characteristics and patterns of energy use. This new series of 2018 CBECS reports provides graphs and data highlights for each of the 14 building types. In each report, we show how much the building type contributes to the building stock, floorspace, energy consumption, and expenditures, and we also unpack the building type subcategories. We provide energy consumption data by energy source, building type subcategories, and end uses. Each report concludes with a section on heating equipment, cooling equipment, and any other types of equipment that are specific to the building type.

April 27, 2023

2018 CBECS webinar recording now available

On April 19, 2023, we hosted a webinar to share 2018 CBECS results and survey methodology. The presentation slides describe the U.S. commercial buildings stock and energy consumption in 2018, show how we collected the data, and offer tips for using information from CBECS. A recording of the webinar is also available on our YouTube channel.

April 12, 2023

Full set of 2018 CBECS methodology reports is now available

We just released a set of new reports about how we gathered information for the 2018 CBECS from start to finish. The reports provide details about the CBECS process, including constructing a frame, selecting a sample, conducting the Buildings Survey and the Energy Supplier Survey, processing the data, and modeling energy end-use consumption.

Information from these reports will be part of a CBECS webinar being held on Wednesday, April 19 from 2:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m. eastern time, which will also include highlights from our 2018 CBECS data reports, tips and tricks on using the CBECS data, and a live Q&A session. The webinar is open to the public, but registration is required. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email with instructions on how to join the webinar.

December 21, 2022

2018 CBECS final consumption and expenditures results and microdata released

The final 2018 CBECS data are now available. Today’s data release includes more tables on total major fuel, electricity, and natural gas consumption and expenditures, and it adds data tables for fuel oil, district heat, and end-use data estimates. We also expanded the consumption and expenditures flipbook with new highlights from the data.

The public use microdata file now contains final data across the building characteristics, consumption, expenditures, and end-use variables, so data users can create custom tables.

September 28, 2022

2018 CBECS preliminary consumption and expenditures results released

The 2018 CBECS preliminary consumption and expenditures data are now available. This preliminary data release includes tables on total major fuel, electricity, and natural gas consumption and expenditures, providing totals and energy intensities for the United States and for census regions in detailed categories. We have also prepared a flipbook that shows highlights from the preliminary data.

We will release final 2018 CBECS data in December 2022. This data release will add end-use data estimates (for example, Tables E1–E11 from the 2012 CBECS) and data tables for fuel oil and district heat. We will also release the remaining consumption data tables for total energy, electricity, and natural gas. We will add the energy consumption and expenditures variables to the public use microdata file; the microdata file is provided so data users can create their own custom tables.

 

MARCH 10, 2022

Update: We will release preliminary consumption and expenditures data in August

We are currently processing energy consumption data and modeling end uses, and we expect to release preliminary data in August 2022. We strive to provide accurate release dates and to continually refine our project roadmap because we understand how release dates help you plan when and how you use CBECS data.

The August 2022 data release will include detailed tables of total major fuel, electricity, and natural gas consumption. The tables will present consumption and expenditures totals and intensities for the United States and for census regions in detailed row categories (for example, Tables C1-C5, C13-C15, and C23-25 from the 2012 CBECS). We are also preparing a graphical report highlighting the data in these tables.

We will release final 2018 CBECS data in November 2022. This data release will add end-use data estimates (for example, Tables E1-E11 from the 2012 CBECS). We will also release the remaining detailed consumption data tables and append the public use microdata file with variables for energy consumption and expenditures. We publish this file so that data users can create custom tables.

Projected schedule of 2018 CBECS data releases

Consumption and expenditures (C&E) preliminary estimates August 2022
C&E detailed tables and microdata November 2022
 

NOVEMBER 30, 2021

2018 CBECS building characteristics public use files now available

The 2018 CBECS building characteristics microdata file is now available for public use. We publish this file so that data users can create custom tables. We provide CSV (comma delimited) files and SAS data files along with data file documentation. The data represent commercial buildings from the 50 states and the District of Columbia. Each record corresponds to a single response from an in-scope building in the sample. The sample represents an estimated 5.9 million buildings in the United States.

Next, we will publish preliminary consumption and expenditures data. Through the Energy Supplier Survey (ESS), we collected data from energy providers of buildings that responded to the CBECS buildings survey. We combine and process the ESS energy usage data with energy usage data from the building respondents. We then provide estimates of energy consumption and expenditures for electricity, natural gas, fuel oil, and district heat. We will publish preliminary consumption and expenditures data in spring 2022. You can find further descriptions of the two phases of CBECS data collection on the About the CBECS webpage.

In the last stage of the consumption and expenditures data release, we will publish detailed tables and microdata. Detailed tables include consumption and expenditures data by energy source in total, per building, and per square foot by categories such as building floorspace, principal building activity, year constructed, and census division. We also provide consumption by end use, such as heating, air conditioning, ventilation, and lighting. We will publish consumption and expenditures detailed tables and microdata in summer 2022.

Projected schedule of 2018 CBECS data releases

Consumption and expenditures (C&E) preliminary estimates Spring 2022
C&E detailed tables and microdata Summer 2022
 

September 21, 2021

2018 CBECS building characteristics results released

The 2018 CBECS building characteristics estimates are now available. This data release includes number of buildings and floorspace by characteristics such as geographic region, building activity, size and age, employment and occupancy, energy sources used, and energy-related equipment. Data are available in detailed tables and a flipbook.

In November, we will publish the raw data files for building characteristics. We will provide CSV (comma delimited) files and SAS data files to the public along with data file documentation.

Next, we will publish preliminary consumption and expenditures data. Through the Energy Supplier Survey (ESS), we collected data from energy providers of buildings that responded to the CBECS buildings survey. We combine and process the ESS energy usage data with energy usage data from the building respondents. We then provide estimates of energy consumption and expenditures for electricity, natural gas, fuel oil, and district heat. We plan to publish preliminary consumption and expenditures data in spring 2022. You can find further descriptions of the two phases of CBECS data collection on the About the CBECS webpage.

In the last stage of the consumption and expenditures data release, we will publish detailed tables and microdata. Detailed tables include consumption and expenditures data by energy source in total, per building, and per square foot by categories such as building floorspace, principal building activity, year constructed, and census division. We also provide consumption by end use, such as heating, air conditioning, ventilation, and lighting. We will publish consumption and expenditures detailed tables and microdata in summer 2022.

Projected schedule of 2018 CBECS data releases

Public use microdata on building characteristics November 2021
Consumption and expenditures (C&E) preliminary estimates Spring 2022
CC&E detailed tables and microdata Summer 2022
 

July 14, 2021

Update to data release schedule: detailed information on building characteristics will be released before the microdata

To ensure you receive the highest possible quality in public use microdata and support in its use, we have rescheduled the release of this file along with supporting documentation to November 2021.

The release of the detailed tables is still on track for publication in late summer 2021. These tables contain information on topics such as number of workers, ownership and occupancy, structural characteristics, energy sources and uses, heating and cooling equipment, refrigeration and lighting types, and much more.

In addition, we still plan to release the preliminary consumption and expenditures data in spring 2022.

For more information about the two phases of CBECS data collection, visit About the CBECS.

Projected schedule of 2018 CBECS data releases

Detailed tables on building characteristics August/September 2021
Public use microdata on building characteristics November 2021
Consumption and expenditures (C&E) preliminary estimates Spring 2022
C&E detailed tables and microdata Summer 2022
 

May 11, 2021

CBECS releases data center research findings; detailed building characteristics coming soon

As part of the 2018 CBECS data collection, we conducted a pilot study of 50 data center buildings to assess the feasibility of publishing data centers as a separate building type. A new report, 2018 CBECS Data Center Pilot Results, discusses this study’s approach and key findings. We concluded that we would need both a high-quality frame and industry cooperation to collect statistically valid building characteristics and energy consumption estimates for data centers.

We continue to process the data we collected during the 2018 CBECS survey cycle, and we will release detailed 2018 CBECS building characteristics data later this summer. We plan to release the preliminary consumption and expenditures data in Spring 2022. For further descriptions of the two phases of CBECS data collection, visit About the CBECS.

Projected schedule of 2018 CBECS data releases

Detailed tables and public use microdata on building characteristics August 2021
Consumption and expenditures (C&E) preliminary estimates Spring 2022
C&E detailed tables and microdata Summer 2022
 

November 18, 2020

2018 CBECS preliminary results released

The 2018 CBECS preliminary building characteristics are now available. This preliminary data release includes building counts, square footage, and age of buildings by building size, building activity, year of construction, and census region and division. Data are available in a table and a flipbook.

The next release (in spring or summer of 2021) will include more detailed building characteristics, which will have similar content as the 2012 CBECS Detailed Tables. In the last stage of the building characteristics data release, EIA will publish the raw data files.

The 2018 CBECS recently completed its final phase of data collection: the Energy Supplier Survey (ESS). EIA collected data from energy providers of buildings that responded to the CBECS buildings survey. Next, EIA will combine and process the ESS energy usage data with energy usage data from the building respondents. Energy consumption and expenditures data should be available beginning in spring 2022. See About the CBECS for further descriptions of the two phases of CBECS data collection.

Projected schedule of 2018 CBECS data releases

Detailed tables and public use microdata on building characteristics Spring or summer 2021
Consumption and expenditures (C&E) preliminary estimates Spring 2022
C&E detailed tables and microdata Spring or summer 2022
 

September 10, 2020

2018 CBECS data releases start soon

The first stage of 2018 CBECS data processing is complete, and EIA plans to release preliminary building characteristics estimates in November. This preliminary data release will include building counts and total square footage by categories such as building activity, census region, building size, and year of construction. The next data release will include more detailed building characteristics in the form of tables and public use microdata files.

CBECS data collection is currently in its second phase, the Energy Supplier Survey (ESS), which wraps up this fall. Since April, EIA has been collecting data from energy providers of buildings that responded to the CBECS buildings survey. After the ESS is finished, the ESS energy usage data will be combined and processed along with energy usage data from the building respondents. Energy consumption and expenditures data should be available beginning in spring 2022. See About the CBECS for further descriptions of the two phases of CBECS data collection.

Projected schedule of 2018 CBECS data releases

Building characteristics (BC) preliminary estimates November 2020
BC detailed tables and public use microdata Spring/Summer 2021
Consumption and expenditures (C&E) preliminary estimates Spring 2022
C&E detailed tables and microdata Spring/Summer 2022
 

January 22, 2020

2018 CBECS buildings survey data collection completed

The field data collection phase of the 2018 CBECS has just ended. The field period began in mid-April 2019, employing about 180 interviewers across the United States. As interviewers left over the course of the project, an additional 65 interviewers were hired and trained.

The starting sample size for the 2018 CBECS was about 16,000 buildings. We estimated that about 8,000 of those buildings would be eligible and respond to the survey. To be eligible for the CBECS, a building must be 1,000 square feet or larger and at least half the floorspace must be for commercial use (i.e., not residential, manufacturing/industrial, or agricultural).

Participation rates in federal surveys have been declining in recent years, CBECS included. After observing that the 2018 CBECS presented the most challenging field issues in CBECS history, we estimate that the resulting sample size will be similar to the 2012 CBECS, which was 6,720 buildings.

We aim to publish the first characteristics results this summer, after data review and processing at EIA. We’ll be following up with the energy suppliers for the responding buildings starting this March. The supplier data will provide energy usage and cost data for these buildings.

 

June 20, 2019

Learn how buildings were selected for the 2018 CBECS

The 2018 CBECS is currently being fielded by interviewers across the United States. We sampled about 16,000 buildings for our starting sample. Want to learn how those buildings were selected from the stock of more than 5.6 million commercial buildings? See How Were Buildings Selected for the 2018 CBECS?

New for the 2018 CBECS was the introduction of virtual listing, which is the use of satellite imagery and GIS tools to build the sampling frame. To read more about this innovation, see Virtual Listing in the 2018 CBECS.

 

April 22, 2019

Data collection begins for the 2018 CBECS

Training for the field interviewers for the 2018 CBECS was held April 2-6 in Atlanta, GA.

training sign photo

Data collection began April 8, 2019 and will continue for about 8 months. Preliminary results will be available to the public in spring 2020.

About 180 interviewers participated in a five-day training on CBECS. They were thoroughly instructed on all the steps necessary to find the sampled building, identify the best respondent, and complete the CBECS interview.

For the 2018 CBECS, respondents now have the option to self-complete the survey via the web!

For quality control purposes, an interviewer will still make an initial visit to each building. During the visit, interviewers will first validate that the building interviewed is the same one that was sampled. If not, the results will not be representative of the U.S. building stock. Second, interviewers will orient respondents to the purpose of CBECS and offer information about getting started via the web.

In every case, interviewers will still be available on demand to answer any questions or to complete the interview in person, if desired.

Was your building contacted to complete the CBECS?
Go to www.CBECS2018.org for more information and to complete the survey. You will need a PIN.

 

October 31, 2018

The 2018 CBECS questionnaire has been finalized

Over the past year, EIA has held CBECS outreach events via webinar, engaged in discussions with stakeholders, published a Federal Register Notice, and solicited input from building energy experts. After gathering all of this input, the 2018 CBECS questionnaire has been finalized and will soon be under review by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Here is a five-page summary of the questions—the document provides a comparison with the 2012 CBECS, showing which questions have been kept, removed, and added. In a future status update here, we will provide a document with the complete set of questions.

Data collection will begin in April 2019. For the first time ever, respondents will have the option to complete the CBECS on their own via a website. EIA will still offer to conduct the CBECS in person with a trained interviewer for those who need or prefer that option. We expect to begin publishing data in mid-2020.

 

May 30, 2018

A draft 2018 CBECS questionnaire is available for review

EIA would like to thank those who participated in the stakeholder outreach webinars held in early March. We have used your feedback to modify the content of the 2018 CBECS.

A short amount of time remains for comments on potential improvements to the CBECS questionnaire. With each new survey cycle, we make changes to keep the survey relevant, and we welcome your input.

You can submit feedback to EIA in these ways:

As you review the questionnaire (available with the FRN at the link above), use this overview of the 2018 CBECS and outline of the questionnaire, which highlights the changes made to date.

 

November 2, 2017

The next CBECS will collect data for calendar year 2018

EIA is planning the next Commercial Buildings Energy Consumption Survey (CBECS). The data collection period will begin in April 2019, gathering information for reference year 2018.

Two notable innovations to the study are in the works. One is the introduction of satellite imagery and GIS tools to build the sampling frame. This virtual listing should save time and resources compared to traditional on-the-ground field listing methods. The other innovation is that the 2018 CBECS will offer a web option to building respondents, in response to feedback during the 2012 CBECS. The web option will allow respondents the flexibility to complete and submit their CBECS data when it is convenient for them and will provide automated methods to attach supporting documents.

In the coming months, EIA will be soliciting input from stakeholders on planned survey content. If you wish to participate, please contact Joelle Michaels, CBECS Survey Manager, and indicate your area of interest.

Regular project status updates will be provided throughout the CBECS 2018 survey cycle here.

 

May 17, 2017

CBECS lighting report just published

A new CBECS report, Trends in Lighting in Commercial Buildings, provides detailed information on lighting from the 2012 CBECS and reviews trends in commercial lighting going back to the 1995 CBECS. It compares the amount of commercial buildings floorspace lit by standard fluorescent, compact fluorescent, incandescent, high-intensity discharge, and halogen lighting across different building activities from 2003 to 2012. The report also provides information on lighting use by building size and on the use of lighting controls and control strategies.

 

February 9, 2017

Water consumption data for large buildings from the 2012 CBECS now available

Estimates of water consumption in large (greater than 200,000 square feet) commercial buildings from the 2012 CBECS are now available in this report: Water Consumption in Large Buildings Summary. Included in the report are annual water consumption estimates (Table W1) and daily estimates (Table WD1). Additionally, a public use microdata file is available for users to perform custom analysis. For information on how the data were collected, see How was water usage information collected for commercial buildings?

 

December 20, 2016

Building activity subcategory tables from the 2012 CBECS now available

National-level estimates for 53 building activity subcategories are now available in five new tables. The CBECS Detailed Tables provide 16 categories for principal building activity, but the CBECS questionnaire actually collects around 100 different building activities. Not all of the subcategories have large enough sample counts to provide statistically significant estimates, but there are 53 subcategories that were already provided in the public use microdata files and are now pretabulated. For characteristics such as building counts, building size, operating hours, and age, see Tables PBA1 and PBA2, which are found in the building activity section of the building characteristics tables. For energy consumption estimates, see tables PBA3, PBA4, and PBA5, found in the major fuels, electricity, and natural gas sections, respectively, of the consumption and expenditures tables. For further information on the types of buildings included in each activity subcategory, see 2012 CBECS Building Activity Subcategory Examples and Definitions .

Additionally, minor revisions have been made to Detailed Tables B1, B2, and C4. In B1, the calculation of the mean square feet per worker column was modified to exclude buildings with zero workers; in Table B2, the calculation of the median operating hours per week column was modified to include buildings that were never open; and in Table C4, the calculation of the building-level intensity percentiles were modified to include buildings that do not use any energy.

 

May 17, 2016

2012 CBECS consumption and expenditures detailed tables and public use microdata released

The release of the CBECS consumption and expenditures data is complete. The 2012 CBECS consumption and expenditures detailed tables are comprised of tables C1-C38, which cover overall electricity, natural gas, fuel oil and district heat consumption, and tables E1-E11, which disaggregate the same energy sources by end use (heating, cooling, lighting, etc.). All of the detailed tables contain extensive row categories of building characteristics.

The 2012 CBECS microdata files now contain additional variables for energy consumption and expenditures, in total, by energy source, and by end use. These files contain untabulated records for 6,720 buildings so that data users can create custom tables that are not available through the pretabulated detailed tables. They represent commercial buildings from the 50 States and the District of Columbia. Each record corresponds to a single responding, in-scope sampled building. The sample represents an estimated 5.6 million total buildings in the United States.

Want to learn more about where the CBECS consumption estimates come from? See How Was Energy Usage Information Collected in the 2012 CBECS?

 

March 18, 2016

First 2012 CBECS energy usage estimates now available

The 2012 CBECS summary energy consumption estimates have been released. The tables present electricity, natural gas, fuel oil and district heat consumption in total, per building, per square foot and by end use. Each table has row categories for building floorspace, principal building activity, year constructed, and Census region and division. Within the next two months, EIA will be releasing additional tables with many more row categories and adding consumption and expenditures variables to the public use microdata files. Want to learn more about where the CBECS consumption estimates come from? See How Was Energy Usage Information Collected in the 2012 CBECS?

 

December 10, 2015

2012 CBECS energy usage data coming soon

EIA continues to work on end use modeling to complete the processing of the consumption and expenditures data. The projected release dates have been adjusted to account for the work remaining.

Projected schedule of 2012 CBECS data releases

Building characteristics (BC) preliminary estimates Released June 2014
BC detailed tables  
     Tables B1-B14 (summary; geographic region; size and age; building activity) Released March 2015
     Tables B15-B21 (employment and occupancy) Released April 2015
      Tables B22-B46 (energy sources and uses; end-use equipment) Released April 2015
BC public use microdata Released June 2015
Consumption & expenditures (C&E) preliminary estimates February 2016
C&E detailed tables March 2016
C&E public use microdata April 2016
 

June 25, 2015

2012 CBECS building characteristics public use files now available

The 2012 CBECS microdata files are now available for public use. These files contain untabulated records for individual buildings so that data users can create custom tables that are not available through the pretabulated Detailed Tables. They represent commercial buildings from the 50 States and the District of Columbia. Each record corresponds to a single responding, in-scope sampled building. The sample represents an estimated 5.6 million total buildings in the United States.

There have been some improvements since the 2003 CBECS public use data release. The data file is no longer split up into groups, so one download will provide users with all the CBECS variables. Also, in addition to a CSV (comma delimited) file, the data are also available as a SAS data file. The files contain replicate weights so that data users can calculate standard errors. Detailed examples of how to perform these calculations can be found in an extensive User's Guide. And finally, the CBECS questionnaire has been annotated to be used with the public use files.

EIA continues to work on processing the consumption and expenditures data. The projected release dates have been adjusted slightly to account for the work remaining. The Energy Supplier Survey (ESS) was conducted between March and October 2014, collecting data from energy providers of buildings in the CBECS for which energy usage data was not obtained from the building respondent. Now the ESS energy usage data is being combined and processed with the energy usage from the building respondents and end use estimates (the amount of energy used for heating, cooling, lighting, etc.) are being modeled. See About the CBECS for further description of the two phases of CBECS data collection.

Projected schedule of 2012 CBECS data releases

Building characteristics (BC) preliminary estimates Released June 2014
BC detailed tables  
     Tables B1-B14 (summary; geographic region; size and age; building activity) Released March 2015
     Tables B15-B21 (employment and occupancy) Released April 2015
      Tables B22-B46 (energy sources and uses; end-use equipment) Released April 2015
BC public use microdata Released June 2015
Consumption & expenditures (C&E) preliminary estimates November 2015
C&E detailed tables December 2015
C&E public use microdata February 2016
 
April 30, 2015

Complete set of 2012 CBECS building characteristics tables released

The remaining building characteristics tables (Tables B15 through B46) have just been released. These tables provide detailed information related to employment; building ownership and occupancy; energy sources used; and heating, cooling, water heating, lighting, and refrigeration equipment.

There was a minor error detected in previously released totals for floorspace in the West North Central division within the Leased to tenants line in the Ownership and occupancy row category; that estimate changed from 1,357 million square feet to 1,364 million square feet, and the total U.S. floorspace for buildings leased to tenants changed from 26,093 million square feet to 26,100 million square feet. It should be noted that all the tables still contain preliminary data and many of the estimates are expected to change slightly when the consumption data are released near the end of this year.

EIA continues to work on processing the consumption and expenditures data. The Energy Supplier Survey (ESS) was conducted between March and October 2014, collecting data from energy providers of buildings in the CBECS for which energy usage data was not obtained from the building respondent. Now the ESS energy usage data is being combined and processed with the energy usage from the building respondents. See About the CBECS for further description of the two phases of CBECS data collection.

Projected schedule of 2012 CBECS data releases

Building characteristics (BC) preliminary estimates Released June 2014
BC detailed tables  
     Tables B1-B14(summary; geographic region; size and age; building activity) Released March 2015
     Tables B15-B21 (employment and occupancy) April 2015
      Tables B22-B46 (energy sources and uses; end-use equipment) May 2015
BC public use microdata May 2015
Consumption & expenditures (C&E) preliminary estimates September 2015
C&E detailed tables November 2015
C&E public use microdata December 2015
 
March 4, 2015

First 2012 CBECS Detailed Tables released

The first fourteen building characteristics Detailed Tables, an accompanying report, and survey methodology information - How was the 2012 CBECS buildings survey conducted? - have just been released. The remaining building characteristics data releases will include two more groups of Detailed Tables and the public use microdata files. The public use microdata files are building-level records provided for data users to perform individualized analyses. The data are inoculated so that it is not possible to identify any individual building on the file.

EIA continues to work on processing the consumption and expenditures data. The Energy Supplier Survey (ESS) was conducted between March and October 2014, collecting data from energy providers of buildings in the CBECS for which energy usage data was not obtained from the building respondent. Now the ESS energy usage data is being combined and processed with the energy usage from the building respondents. See About the CBECS for further description of the two phases of CBECS data collection.

Projected schedule of 2012 CBECS data releases

Building characteristics (BC) preliminary estimates Released June 2014
BC detailed tables  
     Tables B1-B14(summary; geographic region; size and age; building activity) Released March 2015
     Tables B15-B21 (employment and occupancy) April 2015
      Tables B22-B46 (energy sources and uses; end-use equipment) May 2015
BC public use microdata May 2015
Consumption & expenditures (C&E) preliminary estimates September 2015
C&E detailed tables November 2015
C&E public use microdata December 2015
 
October 23, 2014

2012 CBECS ESS data collection completed

EIA is concluding the second and final phase of CBECS data collection, the Energy Supplier Survey (ESS). Since March, EIA has been collecting data from energy providers of buildings in the CBECS for which energy usage data was not obtained from the building respondent. Now the ESS energy usage data will be combined and processed with the energy usage from the building respondents. See About the CBECS for further description of the two phases of CBECS data collection.

The 2012 CBECS preliminary building characteristics were released in June. This preliminary data release includes building counts and total square footage by building activity, Census region and division, and building size category, and year of construction.

The next release will be the Building Characteristics Detailed Tables; the tables will be similar to those published for the 2003 CBECS. We have evaluated the work remaining to ensure high data quality and adjusted the projected schedule of data releases as shown below. The Detailed Tables will be released in four groups; the table numbers shown below correspond to the 2003 CBECS tables. Please note that the table descriptions in the schedule below refer to the data presented as columns in the tables. Every table will have extensive CBECS data presented as rows, including building size, activity, occupancy, etc. 

Projected schedule of 2012 CBECS data releases

Building characteristics (BC) preliminary estimates Released June 2014
BC detailed tables  
     Tables B1-B10 (summary; geographic region; size and age) January 2015
     Tables B11-B14 (building activity) February 2015
     Tables B15-B21 (employment and occupancy) March 2015
     Tables B22-B46 (energy sources and uses; end-use equipment) April 2015
BC public use microdata April 2015
Consumption & expenditures (C&E) preliminary estimates Summer 2015
C&E detailed tables Fall 2015
C&E public use microdata Winter 2015
 
June 19, 2014

2012 CBECS preliminary data released

The 2012 CBECS preliminary building characteristics have been completed! This preliminary data release includes building counts and total square footage by building activity, Census region and division, and building size category, and year of construction.

The next release will be the Building Characteristics Detailed Tables, which will be similar to those published for the 2003 CBECS. In the last stage of building characteristics data release, the raw data files will be made available for public use.

CBECS data collection is currently in its second phase, the Energy Supplier Survey (ESS). EIA is collecting data from energy providers of buildings in the CBECS for which energy usage data was not obtained from the building respondent. The ESS will be completed this summer, at which point the ESS energy usage data will be combined and processed with the energy usage from the building respondents. Energy consumption and expenditures data will be available beginning in spring 2015. See About the CBECS for further description of the two phases of CBECS data collection.

Projected schedule of 2012 CBECS data releases

Building characteristics (BC) preliminary estimates Released June 2014
BC detailed tables Fall 2014
BC public use microdata Winter 2014
Consumption & expenditures (C&E) preliminary estimates Spring 2015
C&E detailed tables Fall 2015
C&E public use microdata Winter 2015
 
March 26, 2014

2012 CBECS data will be published in stages

The first stage of CBECS data processing is almost complete and EIA expects to release preliminary building characteristics estimates by early June. This preliminary data release will include building counts and total square footage by categories such as building activity, Census region, and building size category. Next will be the release of Building Characteristics Detailed Tables, which will be similar to those published for the 2003 CBECS. In the last stage of building characteristics data release, the raw data files will be made available for public use.

CBECS data collection is currently in its second phase, the Energy Supplier Survey (ESS). EIA is collecting data from energy providers of buildings in the CBECS for which energy usage data was not obtained from the building respondent. The ESS will be completed this summer, at which point the ESS energy usage data will be combined and processed with the energy usage from the building respondents. Energy consumption and expenditures data will be available beginning in spring 2015. See About the CBECS for further description of the two phases of CBECS data collection.

Projected schedule of 2012 CBECS data releases

Building characteristics (BC) preliminary estimates June 2014
BC detailed tables September 2014
BC public use microdata November 2014
Consumption & expenditures (C&E) preliminary estimates Spring 2015
C&E detailed tables Fall 2015
C&E public use microdata Winter 2015
 
November 20, 2013

CBECS field data collection completed

The active field data collection phase of the 2012 CBECS ended last week. In the next month, home office staff at Westat (the CBECS survey contractor) will continue to work on open cases via telephone interviews. With over 200 interviewers deployed across the U.S. starting in mid-April 2013, the 2012 CBECS was the largest field collection in the 30-year history of CBECS.

Westat has been transmitting cases to EIA every few weeks since May, and the data editing phase here at EIA is making good progress. We are on track to publish the first characteristics results in late April or early May. The consumption and expenditures data releases will follow in about a year. The Energy Suppliers Survey (ESS) data collection begins in early spring: those data will provide energy usage and cost data for about half the CBECS cases.

 
August 7, 2013

CBECS data collection making steady progress

The CBECS interviewers have been in the field for 3 months now, and they have already collected data for about 4,500 buildings all across the country.

Back here at EIA, CBECS staff are reviewing the data files as we receive them. The information collected in these interviews has already passed through and cleared two levels of automated data checks. Now, we're checking all the open-ended responses and interviewer comments and running case-level edits that check for item consistency within questionnaires and help to verify that the energy usage data are accurate.

We're also gearing up for the CBECS Energy Suppliers Survey (ESS). In this follow-up survey, we will request energy use and cost data directly from the energy suppliers of electricity, natural gas, fuel oil, or district energy. ESS data collection is on schedule to begin in early spring 2014.

 
April 29, 2013

The 2012 CBECS is in the field!

Data collection for the 2012 CBECS began the week of April 15, 2013. About 250 interviewers are visiting buildings across the U.S. to collect data on their structure, operational characteristics, and energy use. In two recent four-day training sessions, the interviewers were thoroughly trained on all the steps necessary to complete an interview: determining if the building is in scope for the survey, making an appointment, gaining cooperation, using the computer to conduct the interview, and scanning utility bills.

Who are these CBECS interviewers? They are professionals, but usually not energy experts. Many have worked on other large-scale surveys of various topics, while some are new to interviewing. Interviewers are an interesting, diverse group of people from all walks of life. Some of their previous or current other occupations include: accountants, firefighters, social workers, interior designers, caterers, military personnel, teachers, tax preparers, government workers, geological technicians, sales people, certified energy managers, dairy farmers, electrical contractors, DJs, architects, parents, and grandparents. The skills that they all have in common that make them effective interviewers are the ability to talk to respondents, an eye for detail, and a talent for organization.

At least one interviewer is returning to the CBECS for the third time. After working on the 2003 and the 2007 CBECS, this particular experienced interviewer was happy to be back: "This is my favorite project! I find that the majority of the respondents are cooperative. Many have gotten the Advance Package of materials and are happy to talk about their building."

Data collection will continue for approximately the next 6 months.

 
March 6, 2013

Countdown to CBECS data collection

Folders for each building caseFolders for each building caseFolders with materials for each building case
assignment being put together.
The start of the 2012 CBECS field period is just over a month away, and there is a lot of activity occurring right now in preparation!

Over 12,000 buildings across the U.S. have been selected to be interviewed (see How Will Buildings Be Selected for the 2012 CBECS? for more information on sample selection). The CBECS contractor, Westat, is hiring about 300 field interviewers who will visit each of these buildings to determine eligibility for the CBECS. Then they will conduct interviews—either in-person or by telephone—using a survey instrument on a laptop computer. See the final version of the 2012 CBECS questionnaire.

The CBECS interviewers will be trained in-depth to ensure that high quality data are collected. They will begin their training with distance learning modules to acclimate them with the CBECS and energy concepts before they travel to the in-person training. At the beginning of April, they will attend a four-day in-person training session in Los Angeles where they will learn the ins-and-outs of the CBECS interviewing process and the questionnaire. They will get lots of practice with the survey instrument before they hit the streets as soon as they return home from training.

Meanwhile, back at Westat's home office in Rockville, MD, staff are working hard to make sure the behind-the-scenes logistics are in place. Materials for each case assignment are carefully being put together, including maps and other forms that will allow the interviewer to find the sampled buildings. Each respondent will be provided a package of materials about the CBECS when they are first contacted. Among other items, this package contains worksheets to help the building respondents prepare for the interview and a list of organizations that have encouraged participation in the CBECS .

 
December 31, 2012

2012 CBECS area frame construction complete

The "area frame" for the 2012 CBECS is complete! Over a 3 month period, 90 field listers created lists of buildings in 307 area segments by walking or driving through every street in these segments and recording every commercial building eligible for CBECS. Of these segments, 257 are new to the 2012 CBECS and 50 were in the 2003 CBECS and are now updated for changes since 2003. There are an additional 461 segments that were listed in 2003 that will also be part of the area frame. See How Will Buildings Be Selected for the 2012 CBECS? for more information on how the sample frame is constructed. EIA and Westat are preparing these lists for the statistical sampling of buildings that will be selected for the 2012 CBECS. The sampling phase is expected to be completed in January 2013, and data collection remains on schedule, with a start date expected in April 2013.

 
October 1, 2012

2012 CBECS questionnaire completed

After reviewing 400+ suggestions from stakeholders, the proposed 2012 CBECS questionnaire is currently under review by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). The survey is administered using a computerized survey instrument, but we've provided a paper representation of the questionnaire (240 pages) and a summary of the major changes (7 pages) here. Because the computer automates all the question skip patterns, the survey is not as long or complicated as it appears!

 
September 17, 2012

2012 CBECS field lister training completed

A major milestone in the 2012 CBECS sample frame construction is complete! EIA and Westat, the CBECS survey contractor, trained the listers, which are the field staff that will create the area frame portion of the sample frame. See How Will Buildings Be Selected for the 2012 CBECS? for more information on how the sample frame is constructed. Two training sessions of three and a half days each were held in Bethesda, Maryland from September 6 through September 12, 2012. About 90 listers from across the U.S. were trained using a mix of classroom education and practice listings around the streets of Bethesda. They learned all about EIA, the CBECS, and how to canvass their assigned geographic areas to list all CBECS-eligible buildings and record the information that is needed to select the sample of buildings that will be interviewed.

The field listers' hard work and attention to detail will ensure that the sample frame is accurate and complete. They are enthusiastic about working on CBECS and ready to begin their assignments. One field supervisor with many years of experience on various surveys said: "I can't think of a more important study to be working on right now."

The listing is now underway and will be complete in November 2012. The sample, significantly larger than previous cycles, will be selected in January 2013 and the interviewing of the sampled buildings will begin in April 2013.

 
August 26, 2012

EIA collects data on water usage in commercial buildings for the first time

The 2007 round of CBECS was the first time in the 30 year history of CBECS that commercial buildings were surveyed about water consumption and characteristics. These questions were experimental, and EIA found the collection of this data to be successful. See Water Data Collection in the 2007 CBECS for details. EIA plans to collect water consumption data again in the 2012 CBECS.

 
August 17, 2012

EIA releases data on large hospitals from the 2007 CBECS

Though most of the data collected as part of the CBECS 2007 cycle could not be released, EIA has been able to produce data on energy characteristics found in large hospitals in 2007. The data include estimates of building characteristics, energy sources, end uses, energy management features, energy consumption, and water consumption for hospital buildings greater than 200,000 square feet. See Energy Characteristics and Energy Consumed in Large Hospital Buildings in the United States in 2007 for a discussion of the estimates, table list for detailed tables, and 2007 CBECS Large Hospital Building Methodology Report for a methodological report.

 
July 12, 2012

Under construction: the CBECS sampling frame

EIA and the CBECS survey contractor (Westat) are working hard right now to create the CBECS sampling "frame," which is the list from which buildings will be randomly selected to be interviewed. For the details of how the CBECS sampling frame is constructed, see: How Will Buildings Be Selected for the 2012 CBECS?

 
May 24, 2012

CBECS enters the final phase of questionnaire design

EIA thanks the U.S. Green Building Council for hosting an informative 2012 CBECS Stakeholder Meeting on May 15, 2012. We had about 20 participants attending in-person and another 40 or 50 participants via webinar, representing a variety of industries – government, trade associations, real estate, energy consultants, advocacy groups, architects, engineers, laboratories, and equipment manufacturers. EIA presented our planned changes to the 2012 CBECS questionnaire and took comments from the audience on each questionnaire section.

PowerPoint slides from the meeting.

The last steps before the questionnaire is finalized are to (1) write all the new questions according to best practices for survey design and then (2) program them into the CBECS survey instrument. The CBECS is administered by a trained interviewer using a laptop and a structured survey instrument. The questionnaire is programmed in-house by EIA using a survey processing language called Blaise.

 
April 20, 2012

Last call for 2012 CBECS stakeholder input

We are hard at work reviewing all the great feedback on the 2012 questionnaire that we've received to date. So far, we've heard from: the U.S. Green Building Council, ASHRAE, members of the Real Estate Roundtable (RER) such as Tishman Speyer, Simon Property Group, and Transwestern, the American Institute of Architects (AIA), EPA Energy Star, EPA Office of Water, National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), Consortium for Energy Efficiency, Energy Performance Measurement Institute, San Diego State University, BuildingWise, Lutron Electronics, SRG Partnership, Performance Buildings Systems, Grundfos, National Trust for Historic Preservation, and Center for Environmental Innovation in Roofing. Thank you all for taking the time to review the questionnaire.

Please join us on May 15 for an update on the revisions that we've made to the questionnaire so far and a discussion of any last potential updates:

Energy Information Administration (EIA) 2012 CBECS Stakeholder Meeting

Tuesday, May 15th, 1pm-4:30pm
U.S. Green Building Council
2101 L Street, NW Suite 500 Washington, D.C. 20037
Board Room

Please RSVP* to Joelle Michaels by Thursday May 10th
Agenda and slides will be distributed to all RSVPs by Friday, May 11th

*For those who are not able to participate in person we will provide webcast and call-in information

 
March 30, 2012

CBECS is back, and we want your input!

We have created this CBECS section to provide updates on the survey progress.

After a budget delay in 2011, CBECS will now be conducted for reference year 2012. Data collection will begin in April 2013, with the first data releases expected in Spring 2014.Our main focus now is collaborating with our stakeholders to develop the CBECS questionnaire (referred to as the "Final survey instrument" in the graphic below). Each survey cycle we make changes to keep the survey relevant, and we welcome your input. You can submit feedback to EIA in these ways:

 

We will post updates on the progress of the 2012 CBECS according to the timeline below.

 
 
January 11, 2012

CBECS funded for 2012 collection

Following the suspension of the 2011 Commercial Buildings Energy Consumption Survey (CBECS) given insurmountable funding constraints in FY 2011, EIA has resumed preparations to conduct the next Commercial Buildings Energy Consumption Survey (CBECS). EIA plans to field the survey in April 2013, collecting data for reference year 2012. EIA expects to publish the first results of the survey in the first half of FY 2014. EIA is now working with stakeholders to develop the survey instrument. EIA will provide regular project status reports to the public throughout the course of the project.

EIA previously reported that the CBECS 2007 data do not meet EIA standards for quality, credible energy information. As a result, EIA will not publish complete data tables from CBECS 2007 or release a public use file. EIA's status reports for CBECS 2012 will report on risk mitigation strategies undertaken to assure the delivery of CBECS 2012 data.

For further information, please contact Joelle Michaels, CBECS Survey Manager, or by phone at 202-586-8952; or Tom Leckey.