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Welcome to our Shared Content Center! This is where you will find news, current developments and interesting stories about our company and the topics that keep driving us forward. We share information here, about our projects, innovations and events, in a variety of formats, such as blog posts, press releases and files. If you want to keep yourself updated, you're in the right place. 

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Latest First: In our news articles, you’ll find everything we currently have to report.

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What the New EU Buildings Directive Means

Buildings Have Weathered Storms. Now They Face the EPBD

© Federico Rostagno ©gettyimages.com

The revised EU Energy Performance of Buildings Directive (EPBD) gives the real estate sector a clear path toward a lower-emission building stock. The directive focuses on three priorities: reducing emissions, improving energy efficiency, and accelerating the use of renewable energy. For owners, developers and investors, that means new obligations. It also creates a chance to make assets more resilient, competitive and fit for the future. 

What the EPBD Changes

EU member states have until the end of May 2026 to turn the new EPBD into national law. Once implemented, it will reshape how buildings are developed, assessed, operated and renovated. The biggest shift is the move to zero-emission buildings (ZEBs). This standard will guide both new construction and future renovation projects.

 

The directive also introduces tools designed to bring more transparency to the market. These include a harmonized A+ to G classification system, updated energy performance certificates and renovation passports that set out clearer pathways for building upgrades. Life cycle assessment (LCA) will become mandatory as well. The EPBD also addresses cost. New cost-efficiency requirements are designed to help keep environmentally effective measures economically viable. 

What the EPBD Is Designed to Achieve

The EPBD aims to accelerate the transformation of Europe’s building stock. It sets clear priorities, especially for non-residential buildings. The core principle is “worst first,” where the buildings with the weakest energy performance must be renovated first. This applies to 16 percent of the non-residential building stock by 2030 and 26 percent by 2033.

For residential buildings, the directive focuses less on individual building classes and more on overall energy demand. Average primary energy demand must fall by 16 percent by 2030 compared with 2020, with an overall reduction of 20 percent by 2030.

Together, these requirements create a more predictable framework for renovation and they also help companies focus investment where it can have the greatest impact.

Who Needs to Pay Attention?

The EPBD affects a broad range of market participants: real estate companies, developers, owners, asset managers, funds, investors, and PropTech (Property Technology) companies offering digital tools for valuation, monitoring and renovation planning.

In short, anyone who develops, operates or finances buildings needs to understand what the EPBD means for their portfolio. 

Why the EPBD Matters for Companies

For companies, the EPBD brings greater certainty. It shows which standards buildings will need to meet, where action is required and how regulatory expectations will develop over the coming years. That clarity helps companies identify risk earlier and plan investment with more confidence.

 

We recommend developing a decarbonization roadmap as a first step. It shows which measures each building needs, when they need to happen and how they can be implemented in an economically viable way. 

“The EPBD makes one thing clear: Energy efficiency and CO₂ reduction are becoming key value drivers in real estate. Companies that invest in sustainable buildings today and drive modernization across their portfolios will strengthen their long-term resilience and competitiveness.” 

 

Claudio TschätschManager

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Get new insights into the work of Drees & Sommer and learn more about current topics, projects and trends.

Blog

What the New EU Buildings Directive Means

Buildings Have Weathered Storms. Now They Face the EPBD

© Federico Rostagno ©gettyimages.com

The revised EU Energy Performance of Buildings Directive (EPBD) gives the real estate sector a clear path toward a lower-emission building stock. The directive focuses on three priorities: reducing emissions, improving energy efficiency, and accelerating the use of renewable energy. For owners, developers and investors, that means new obligations. It also creates a chance to make assets more resilient, competitive and fit for the future. 

What the EPBD Changes

EU member states have until the end of May 2026 to turn the new EPBD into national law. Once implemented, it will reshape how buildings are developed, assessed, operated and renovated. The biggest shift is the move to zero-emission buildings (ZEBs). This standard will guide both new construction and future renovation projects.

 

The directive also introduces tools designed to bring more transparency to the market. These include a harmonized A+ to G classification system, updated energy performance certificates and renovation passports that set out clearer pathways for building upgrades. Life cycle assessment (LCA) will become mandatory as well. The EPBD also addresses cost. New cost-efficiency requirements are designed to help keep environmentally effective measures economically viable. 

What the EPBD Is Designed to Achieve

The EPBD aims to accelerate the transformation of Europe’s building stock. It sets clear priorities, especially for non-residential buildings. The core principle is “worst first,” where the buildings with the weakest energy performance must be renovated first. This applies to 16 percent of the non-residential building stock by 2030 and 26 percent by 2033.

For residential buildings, the directive focuses less on individual building classes and more on overall energy demand. Average primary energy demand must fall by 16 percent by 2030 compared with 2020, with an overall reduction of 20 percent by 2030.

Together, these requirements create a more predictable framework for renovation and they also help companies focus investment where it can have the greatest impact.

Who Needs to Pay Attention?

The EPBD affects a broad range of market participants: real estate companies, developers, owners, asset managers, funds, investors, and PropTech (Property Technology) companies offering digital tools for valuation, monitoring and renovation planning.

In short, anyone who develops, operates or finances buildings needs to understand what the EPBD means for their portfolio. 

Why the EPBD Matters for Companies

For companies, the EPBD brings greater certainty. It shows which standards buildings will need to meet, where action is required and how regulatory expectations will develop over the coming years. That clarity helps companies identify risk earlier and plan investment with more confidence.

 

We recommend developing a decarbonization roadmap as a first step. It shows which measures each building needs, when they need to happen and how they can be implemented in an economically viable way. 

“The EPBD makes one thing clear: Energy efficiency and CO₂ reduction are becoming key value drivers in real estate. Companies that invest in sustainable buildings today and drive modernization across their portfolios will strengthen their long-term resilience and competitiveness.” 

 

Claudio TschätschManager

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Blog

What the New EU Buildings Directive Means

Buildings Have Weathered Storms. Now They Face the EPBD

© Federico Rostagno ©gettyimages.com

The revised EU Energy Performance of Buildings Directive (EPBD) gives the real estate sector a clear path toward a lower-emission building stock. The directive focuses on three priorities: reducing emissions, improving energy efficiency, and accelerating the use of renewable energy. For owners, developers and investors, that means new obligations. It also creates a chance to make assets more resilient, competitive and fit for the future. 

What the EPBD Changes

EU member states have until the end of May 2026 to turn the new EPBD into national law. Once implemented, it will reshape how buildings are developed, assessed, operated and renovated. The biggest shift is the move to zero-emission buildings (ZEBs). This standard will guide both new construction and future renovation projects.

 

The directive also introduces tools designed to bring more transparency to the market. These include a harmonized A+ to G classification system, updated energy performance certificates and renovation passports that set out clearer pathways for building upgrades. Life cycle assessment (LCA) will become mandatory as well. The EPBD also addresses cost. New cost-efficiency requirements are designed to help keep environmentally effective measures economically viable. 

What the EPBD Is Designed to Achieve

The EPBD aims to accelerate the transformation of Europe’s building stock. It sets clear priorities, especially for non-residential buildings. The core principle is “worst first,” where the buildings with the weakest energy performance must be renovated first. This applies to 16 percent of the non-residential building stock by 2030 and 26 percent by 2033.

For residential buildings, the directive focuses less on individual building classes and more on overall energy demand. Average primary energy demand must fall by 16 percent by 2030 compared with 2020, with an overall reduction of 20 percent by 2030.

Together, these requirements create a more predictable framework for renovation and they also help companies focus investment where it can have the greatest impact.

Who Needs to Pay Attention?

The EPBD affects a broad range of market participants: real estate companies, developers, owners, asset managers, funds, investors, and PropTech (Property Technology) companies offering digital tools for valuation, monitoring and renovation planning.

In short, anyone who develops, operates or finances buildings needs to understand what the EPBD means for their portfolio. 

Why the EPBD Matters for Companies

For companies, the EPBD brings greater certainty. It shows which standards buildings will need to meet, where action is required and how regulatory expectations will develop over the coming years. That clarity helps companies identify risk earlier and plan investment with more confidence.

 

We recommend developing a decarbonization roadmap as a first step. It shows which measures each building needs, when they need to happen and how they can be implemented in an economically viable way. 

“The EPBD makes one thing clear: Energy efficiency and CO₂ reduction are becoming key value drivers in real estate. Companies that invest in sustainable buildings today and drive modernization across their portfolios will strengthen their long-term resilience and competitiveness.” 

 

Claudio TschätschManager

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