Johnson Controls, the pioneer for smart, healthy, and sustainable buildings, is proud to announce it has been named to the 2022 Fortune Change the World list, for its OpenBlue solutions and OpenBlue Net Zero Buildings as a Service offering.
Fortune's Change the World list recognizes companies that use creative tools to address society's unmet needs and is evaluated based on measurable social impact, business results, and degree of innovation.
First-of-its-kind digital solution
OpenBlue is revolutionizing the built environment by digitally transforming building control and operations to drive greater sustainability, energy efficiency, and automated operations through data insights.
Backed by Johnson Controls' complete portfolio and extensive building expertise, it aims to provide a first-of-its-kind digital solution to solve customers' unique needs by managing building systems such as heating, ventilating, and air conditioning (HVAC), lighting, security, general controls, and fire.
One-stop shop service
Customers work closely with Johnson Controls to design, digitalize and deploy an effective net zero program
The OpenBlue Net Zero Buildings as a Service offering provides a one-stop shop for customers aiming to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and meet net-zero goals. Customers work closely with Johnson Controls to design, digitalize and deploy an effective net zero program, making these goals easier to plan, execute, track and achieve.
OpenBlue Net Zero can be delivered as a performance-based service where owners and operators pay for the outcome with a fixed monthly fee to lower their inherent risk and avoid capital investments.
OpenBlue suite of solutions and services
"Buildings represent about 40% of global emissions and there is no decarbonizing our future without decarbonizing buildings. We're proud to deliver the innovative, sustainable technology and services that make net zero leadership easier to achieve through our OpenBlue suite of solutions and services," said George Oliver, Chairman, and CEO of Johnson Controls.
"Our recognition on Fortune's 2022 Change the World list underscores the impact that we're continuing to make for our customers, our communities, the built environment, and the world."
Suite of solutions
The platform is adopted in buildings across multiple industries including headquarters, sports stadiums, hospitals
Since its release in 2020, Johnson Controls has continued to add tools to OpenBlue to advance further the experience of its clients and its buildings' occupants. The platform has been adopted in buildings across multiple industries including headquarters, major sports stadiums, hospitals, education facilities, factories, and data centers.
Johnson Controls offers an entire suite of solutions that address the needs of world-changing organizations and sustainability leaders that will produce a healthier world.
Sustainability efforts
Customers who have embraced OpenBlue are already seeing results and making progress in their sustainability efforts generating renewable energy, decreasing carbon emissions, improving operational efficiency, and cutting down on resources and costs. Examples include:
- Powerhouse Brattørkaia in Trondheim, Norway, the most net energy-positive building in the northern hemisphere is setting a new standard for buildings by focusing on environmental considerations and reducing its carbon footprint. Powerhouse, a Norwegian collaboration set up to drive innovation in energy, collaborated with Johnson Controls to build a net energy-positive smart building that produces more energy than it consumes. The building delivers additional clean power to the community through a district loop.
- Colorado State University Pueblo, powered by a 23-acre solar farm with battery storage that supplies 12M kilowatt hours of electricity, is the first university campus in Colorado to reach net zero electricity for all academic facilities. Collaborating with Johnson Controls, it has created the net zero campus of the future: a sustainable, energy-efficient, and healthy environment that minimizes energy costs for the next two decades and passes these savings on to its students and the community.