4.6 Article

A life-cycle assessment model for zero emission neighborhoods

Journal

JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL ECOLOGY
Volume 24, Issue 3, Pages 500-516

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jiec.12960

Keywords

buildings; built environment; functional unit; life cycle assessment (LCA); urban metabolism; zero emissions

Funding

  1. Research Council of Norway
  2. Research Centre on Zero Emission Neighborhoods in Smart Cities (FME ZEN)

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Buildings represent a critical piece of a low-carbon future, and their long lifetime necessitates urgent adoption of state-of-the-art performance standards to avoid significant lock-in risk regarding long-lasting technology solution choices. Buildings, mobility, and energy systems are closely linked, and assessing their nexus by aiming for Zero Emission Neighborhoods (ZENs) provides a unique chance to contribute to climate change mitigation. We conducted a life-cycle assessment of a Norwegian ZEN and designed four scenarios to test the influence of the house size, household size, and energy used and produced in the buildings as well as mobility patterns. We ran our scenarios with different levels of decarbonization of the electricity mix over a period of 60 years. Our results show the importance of the operational phases of both the buildings and mobility in the neighborhood's construction, and its decline over time induced by the decarbonization of the electricity mix. At the neighborhood end-of-life, embodied emissions then become responsible for the majority of the emissions when the electricity mix is decarbonized. The choice of functional unit is decisive, and we thus argue for the use of a primary functional unit per neighborhood, and a second per person. The use of a per m(2) functional unit is misleading as it does not give credits to the precautionary use of floor area. To best mitigate climate change, climate-positive behaviors should be combined with energy efficiency standards that incorporate embodied energy, and absolute threshold should be combined with behavioral changes.

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