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The Embodied Carbon Review

  • Published on December 4, 2018
"The Embodied Carbon Review – Embodied carbon reduction in 100 regulations and rating systems globally" reports the results of how embodied carbon, that is, the carbon emissions from construction materials, is addressed in certifications and regulations globally. This unique research was conducted by Bionova Ltd (One Click LCA) and sponsored by Saint-Gobain, Stora Enso, Finnish Ministry of the Environment and the Finnish Transport Agency.
The growth of global urban population drives unprecedented construction, resulting in embodied carbon emissions from new buildings alone to excess of 100 gigatons by 2060. If all construction activity, including infrastructure and renovations, are included, the global construction activity carbon until 2060 is set to exceed 230 gigatons, unless carbon intensity is drastically cut. Embodied carbon has a short-term climate impact. If energy grids decarbonize, the embodied carbon from new buildings may remain the higher long-term emissions driver as well. As buildings become more energy-efficient and use more renewable energy sources, the proportional share of embodied carbon grows. This review analyzed environmental sustainability certifications and regulations applied to construction works used at least regionally. The study identified 156 such systems, of which 105 include measures addressing embodied carbon directly. National systems were identified in 26 countries. Embodied carbon is addressed with methods of different carbon reduction efficiency, including carbon reporting, comparison in design, carbon rating, carbon caps, and mandatory offsetting. Embodied carbon reduction methods also vary in the ways the performance is rated, and if low-carbon product selection is included as a complementary measure. Results are reported and analyzed for five global regions, in addition with all internationally used systems and civil engineering works-targeting systems analyzed separately. Regions differ significantly in terms of prevalence of embodied carbon targeting, as well as the level of sophistication for its reduction. The report concludes with an explanation of the identified best practices for embodied carbon reduction, highlighting of the successful cases of embodied carbon reduction in certification, regulation, and infrastructure, as well as an outlook for embodied carbon reduction in the future. The Embodied Carbon Review is planned to be updated from time to time. Updates will be available on www.oneclicklca.com/embodied-carbon-review. The Embodied Carbon Review has been published and it is available for public download at: https://www.oneclicklca.com/embodied-carbon-review/ The Embodied Carbon Review has been shared and downloaded hundreds of times by professionals all over the world who are interested in the status quo, outlook, and best practices for embodied carbon reduction. We expect it to become a valuable tool for policymakers worldwide to address climate action goals at local and global levels. The Embodied Carbon Review is planned to be updated from time to time. Updates will be available on www.embodiedcarbonreview.com or at www.oneclicklca.com/embodied-carbon-review, where you can also download the current version. For questions about The Embodied Carbon Review, please contact: Panu Pasanen, Chief Executive Officer, Bionova Ltd panu.pasanen@bionova.fi, with a copy to hello@bionova.fi Mobile 358 44 2871 722

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Project start date
04/12/2018
Project end date
04/12/2018

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