This document discusses how global environmental governance affects behavior at the household level. It argues that households have become a primary site for reproducing global power structures related to environmentalism. Through eco-knowledge and conserveillance, which involve producing scientific knowledge about the environment and monitoring resource usage, individuals internalize rational management of natural resources. This constructs people as subjects relating to the environment. The presentation provides an ethnographic study of a sustainable housing rehab project to examine how global environmental governance is (re)produced and (re)created at the household level.