CBPS Compliance Services Washington | Avoid Penalties

CBPS compliance Deadline: Avoid continued penalties or fines by filing your report today!

Clean Buildings Performance Standard (CBPS)

Operations and Maintenance

warning icon CBPS

Tier 1 CBPS deadline: June 1, 2026. You have under . Check your deadline in 60 seconds.

The O&M Program That Keeps You Compliant

The Operations and Maintenance (O&M) program is part of the Energy Management Plan. The O&M program shall beimplemented in accordance with Section 6 and Normative Annex L and must be implemented 12 months prior to themandatory compliance date.This form contains a list of the O&M program reporting requirements and must be submitted to comply with the CleanBuildings Performance Standard. By completing this form, the building owner and qualified person attest that the O&Mprogram complies with the Clean Building Performance Standard (CBPS).

What is included

Key checks

HVAC scheduling

lighting controls

building envelope review

water system maintenance

plug load policy

Let’s Get Your Building Benchmarking-Ready

Avoid Penalties.

Stay Ahead of Deadlines.

Benchmarking compliance in Washington isn’t just a legal obligation – it’s a smart investment strategy. We’ll guide you through every step: ENERGY STAR setup, utility data tracking, performance reporting, and state submission.

Frequently Asked Questions

When must my O&M program be running?
Twelve months before your filing deadline. For example, a building with a June 1, 2026 filing deadline must have its O&M program running by June 1, 2025.

CBPS (Clean Buildings Performance Standard) is a Washington State energy efficiency law that requires certain commercial buildings to meet energy performance targets. Compliance helps reduce energy costs, lower emissions, and avoid state penalties.

Clean buildings are essential to meeting our state energy goals. In 2019 the Clean Buildings bill was signed into law, expanded in 2022, and augmented in 2023. The objective is to lower costs and pollution from fossil fuel consumption in the state’s existing covered buildings, multifamily buildings, and campus district energy systems. The law also provides Tier 1 and Tier 2 incentives to encourage building owners to make energy efficiency improvements earlier than required.

Public Buildings are buildings owned by State Agencies, School and Health Districts, Colleges and Cities, Municipalities and Counties (this does not include buildings owned by a non-profit, even if the non-profit is funded by a public agency).