CREDAI announces nationwide tie-up with IGBC to build 1,000 certified green projects and achieve Net Zero by 2070

Boman Irani became the new President of CREDAI National for the term 2023-25 ​​at the induction ceremony of CREDAI on 15th April. , Photo Credit: Shivakumar PV

The Confederation of Real Estate Developers Association of India (CREDAI) has entered into a nationwide tie-up with the Indian Green Building Council (IGBC) with a resolve to design and build over 1,000 certified green projects in the next two years. 4,000 green projects by 2030 by adopting IGBC Green and Net Zero building ratings.

This was announced on the occasion of the installation ceremony of CREDAI, in which Boman Irani became the new Chairman of CREDAI National for the term 2023-25.

CREDAI MCHI, too, announced a change in leadership with Dominic Rommel taking over as the chairman of the realty body in the Mumbai metropolitan region.

This would mean adding more than 4,00,000 housing units to the green development category across the country. According to a statement, these projects will be certified by the IGBC and ‘will usher in a new era of green development, inspiring thousands of real estate developers as CREDAI leads the countrywide green building movement’.

CREDAI’s partnership with IGBC, which is known for setting industry standards for sustainable development across India, will allow CREDAI developers to strengthen the know-how and capabilities required to ‘do better’.

CREDAI National President Boman Irani said, “We look forward to continuing to work closely with the government to ensure a more conducive ecosystem that enables sustainable development, provides complete transparency and helps our home buyers and ancillary industries. Raises governance standards for.”

“We understand the responsibility that we bear, and we hope to guide our members into a new era of inclusive and sustainable development. To achieve this, we have adopted our motto ‘Better Building, Better Construction’ ‘ has collaborated with IGBC to achieve this, which will go a long way in enabling developers to build sustainably.”