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A Department of Energy program that launched in 2009 has been issuing certificates to builders whose homes achieve a HERS score of 70 or less. The builders also get the right to display the department's EnergySmart Home Scale label. Like KB's, it features the home's HERS score and an estimated average monthly energy bill. The program has issued certificates on more some 5,500 homes, most of them newly built, said George James, the program's project manager. KB, which builds homes to order, said it will provide both an initial HERS ranking and energy bill estimate when a buyer selects the type of home they want to purchase. An independent energy rater then inspects the home once it's built, and the homebuyer will receive an updated estimate and HERS ranking. The HERS rankings and monthly energy bill estimates can vary among KB's homes, depending on size and the part of the country they're in. One 2,167-square-foot KB house in Jacksonville, Fla., got a HERS score of 74 and an estimated monthly energy bill of $100. A 1,550-square-foot home in Las Vegas ranked 66 on the HERS index, with its owners likely to pay out $89 a month in energy costs. And just as with cars' fuel efficiency estimates, how a buyer uses a home can raise or lower the energy bill projections provided by KB. With cars, the actual miles per gallon that drivers get depends on how fast they drive, how they maintain the vehicles and what fuel they use. With a home, leaving the lights on all day or setting a thermostat too high in the winter or too low in the summer will skew energy costs. For that reason KB doesn't guarantee any specific level of gas and electric utility costs, though it says the HERS rating it advertises to buyers will be exact. The energy bill guarantee offered by McGuyer Homebuilders also has its limits. "There'll be some things we can't guarantee, like if somebody puts 50 tanning beds in their home," says Ken Gezella, regional sales manager for the homebuilder's Dallas and Fort Worth, Texas, market. "That's not what the energy guarantee is for," he says. "It's for the average buyer."
[Associated
Press;
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