Countries across the globe are working on decarbonisation strategies for their built environments. While strategies to reduce emissions in the built environment have previously focused on operational emissions, there is a growing emphasis to also address embodied carbon due to the rapid decarbonisation of the electricity sector.
Embodied carbon is defined as the embodied carbon emissions that occur upfront during construction from materials and site activities, in-use emissions from maintenance works, and end-of-life emissions. Out of these, upfront carbon is the most critical, as it is large (around 70% of all embodied carbon) and cannot be changed once the building opens as it is spent. In fact, the total amount of upfront emissions from construction activities is around 5 to 10% of Australia’s total yearly emissions. These emissions are also difficult to eliminate.
Australia needs to tackle embodied carbon to achieve its net zero carbon emissions by 2050 target.
To accelerate the creation of critical policies that will ensure an aligned, common, and comprehensive approach to also addressing upfront carbon emissions, ASBEC is releasing this Issues Paper with the goal of delivering a Comprehensive Policy Framework later this year.
ASBEC aims to create this policy framework by:
– Identifying the major issues and solutions that can create momentum for change.
– Selecting focus areas for effort rather than diluting effort across too many areas.
This Issues Paper lays out how the built environment contributes to Australia’s carbon emissions and why we need to focus on upfront embodied carbon now. Based on research findings from Australia and abroad it highlights the issues that need to be addressed to successfully tackle embodied carbon and to achieve Australia’s commitment to net zero carbon emissions by 2050.
Read ASBEC’s Issues Paper, Embodied carbon emissions in Australia’s built environment
Read ASBEC’s Issues Paper Annex
Complete the Issues Paper Survey
View the MECLA webinar recording