Save time by listening to our audio articles as you multitaskSome worry that this pace of construction could literally cost the Earth. Today, buildings are responsible for almost 40% of global energy-related carbon emissions, with homes alone accounting for nearly 20%. Property emissions are a combination of two things. The first is the day-to-day running of a building: energy used to light up, heat or cool homes, office blocks and shopping malls.
Policymakers are scrambling to find solutions. New energy-efficiency standards for buildings in England and Wales mean that one in ten offices in central London risks becoming obsolete in 2023. Nearly 60% could become unusable by 2027. Across the, where nearly two-thirds of the building stock relies on fossil fuels for heating and cooling, officials want nearly half of a building’s energy to come from renewable sources by 2030. Cities are setting lofty targets, too.
There are exceptions. The Netherlands has required whole-life carbon assessments for some large buildings since 2013. California imposes carbon-intensity limits on certain construction materials. For now, embodied carbon accounts for a smaller share of global emissions than the operational sort. But that will change as buildings become more energy-efficient. In many modern buildings, embodied carbon already represents as much as half of total lifetime emissions.
More scare mongering do your own fact check carbon foot print has been great it's been so much higher100 years ago and so on als we had more active volcanoes which is way worst than any gas cars of fuel
Here is an organization trying to find solutions.
Ban buildings
F- parís climate agreement
What of African countries that need to build industries to employ hundreds of millions of restive youth by 2050? Give up prosperity & stability for the treaty? Expect carbon credits to fill the gap? Did aid work? Why is China winning? The treaty's jst words on paper. Inedible
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