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A review of existing policy for reducing embodied energy and greenhouse gas emissions of buildings

Journal

ENERGY POLICY
Volume 168, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.enpol.2022.112920

Keywords

Embodied energy; Embodied greenhouse gas emissions; Buildings; Policy; Governance

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The building sector plays a significant role in global energy demand and greenhouse gas emissions. Recent studies have shown that improvements in operational energy efficiency have led to increased indirect or embodied energy demands and associated emissions. Existing policies in Australia, Canada, USA, and the United Kingdom mostly rely on voluntary instruments, with limited regulatory measures at the national level. Signals of change include growing private sector investment and increasing targets for emissions reduction.
The building sector is a significant contributor to global energy demand and greenhouse gas emissions and thus has a major role in combating climate change. To date, efforts to address this issue have focussed on reducing energy demand during building operation, resulting in significant reductions in this area. However, recent studies have shown that substantial improvements to operational energy efficiency have increased the relative significance of indirect or embodied energy demands and associated greenhouse gas emissions. Subsequently, policies addressing this next frontier of energy and emissions reductions are emerging. To understand different approaches and inform future development, this study reviews existing policy mechanisms targeting embodied energy and greenhouse gas emissions in the building sector for four countries - Australia, Canada, USA and United Kingdom. The study found that voluntary instruments dominate the policy landscape, with regulatory measures largely absent at national levels and confined to inconsistent application across lower levels of governance. Signals of change emerging from the analysis include growing private sector investment and increasing quantitative targets for reduction. The study concludes with the challenges facing this sector of energy governance, alongside recommendations for regulated caps, mandatory LCA reporting, prerequisite requirements in voluntary instruments, data accessibility and resolving methodological inconsistencies.

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