flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Latest UN IPCC report on climate change should be cause for concern among AEC professionals and the real estate industry

Sustainable Design and Construction

Latest UN IPCC report on climate change should be cause for concern among AEC professionals and the real estate industry


By ROBERT CASSIDY, EXECUTIVE EDITOR, BUILDING DESIGN+CONSTRUCTION | August 20, 2021
"Climate Change 2021" is the Sixth Assessment from the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

"Climate Change 2021: The Physical Science Basis" is the Sixth Assessment from the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

The recent report of the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, Climate Change 2021: The Physical Science Basis, is not a happy read.

The IPCC report provides new estimates of the chances of crossing the crucial global warming level of 1.5°C in the coming decades. It finds that “unless there are immediate, rapid, and large-scale reductions in greenhouse gas emissions, limiting warming to close to 1.5°C or even 2°C will be beyond reach.” A 1.5°C increase in global warming is believed to be the point at which climate change would be irreversible. To quote the report’s chief author, Joeri Roejl, PhD, “The greater weight of evidence has confirmed the trend, as expected, and it’s not really good news.”

As you’ve heard many times, existing and new-construction buildings and homes are the biggest source of global carbon emissions: 39%—28% for operations (heating and cooling, lighting, etc.), 11% for building materials and construction. (“Industry” contributes 32%; “transportation,” 23%.) Clearly, the building sector plays the leading role in this global drama.

 

SUSTAINABILITY AND CLIMATE CHANGE, CIRCA 2003

At Building Design+Construction, we’ve been writing about ways AEC professionals and building product manufacturers have improved energy and water efficiency in buildings since well before the scientific community had firmly established humankind’s role in climate change.

In 2003, as the U.S. Green Building Council and its powerful new green building certification system, LEED, were ramping up, we published our “White Paper on Sustainability,” the first in-depth investigation of the fast-emerging green building movement, and followed it up in 2004 with a “Progress Report on Sustainability.”

Each of these reports offered specific recommendations for action, such as “launch a pilot program in 10 large public school districts to measure the impact of green schools on student achievement and health,” and named the parties who should be responsible for carrying out these measures (in this case, six schools organizations and government entities) and "promote a national program to reduce construction and demolition waste by 50% in five years" (progressive GC firms would be hitting 90-95% C+D waste reduction in very short order).

 

Climate Change WP Cover.png

BD+C PUBLISHES ‘GREEN BUILDINGS + CLIMATE CHANGE’ WHITE PAPER

In 2008, we published our most ambitious white paper, a 40,000-word, 64-page report, “Green Buildings + Climate Change,” which spelled out 22 practical steps that design and construction firms could take to flatten the GHG growth curve.

Some of our recommendations were fairly easy for the AEC community to undertake; for example, AEC firms should “fit out your own office to reduce GHG emissions”—a practical step many AEC firms have taken in the interim, often at the LEED Platinum level.

Other recommendations had more bite and required considerably greater investment of time, money, and thinking by larger and more extensive constituencies:

  • “Give much greater attention to special threats to waterfront developments and buildings in severe-weather zones”—as evidenced by 2012’s Superstorm Sandy and, recently, more frequent and powerful superstorms and hurricanes.
  • “Cities and counties should plug the leaks in the 72,000 miles of water pipes and sewer mains” that were 80 years old or more at that time (sounds like an early call for an infrastructure program, doesn’t it?)

 

ENCOURAGING THE USE OF SUSTAINABLE PRODUCTS

Two recommendations from the 2008 report merit further consideration today.

The first advised AEC firms to “work with your clients to encourage them to use the most energy-efficient products and systems in their [building] projects.”

Since the early days of LEED, we have seen the proliferation of certification programs for building products—Greenguard, Greenseal, Cradle to Cradle, FSC and SFI (for wood), Red List Free, etc. There are now more than 50 certification programs for building products, buildings, homes, whole neighborhoods, sites, parking structures, schools, and more.

The second recommendation from 2008 encouraged AEC firms to “leverage your supply chain to achieve GHG reductions.” We noted that Turner Construction, the largest building contractor in the U.S. (currently, $14 billion/year in construction), purchases many building products and equipment in high volume to achieve dollar savings for its clients.

We recommended that “giant GCs” like Turner—as well as states, counties, and cities—take this tool one step further and use their purchasing power to “encourage (or require) suppliers to post the carbon emissions of their products and systems online or in their purchase orders.” Many suppliers are doing that in one form or other, via environmental or health product declarations) or via so-called ESG (environmental, social, and governance) impact reports.

Recommendations like these from 13 years ago may seem modest in the context of the current climate crisis, but they were fairly radical at the time and often drew criticism from some in the AEC world who denied that human activity had any role in climate change.

 

AECO FIRMS TAKING ACTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE

Today, there is a burning desire among progressive architecture, engineering, and construction firms, as well as among forward-thinking real estate development companies, to address climate change.  

Eight hundred architecture irms have signed on to the AIA 2030 Commitment to achieve carbon neutrality in their building projects by 2030. The Carbon Leadership Forum is shedding light on the embodied carbon content of building materials and products. The ILFI’s Living Building Challenge 4.0 is pushing AEC firms higher and higher in terms of sustainable design, especially regarding materials.

Just 10 years ago, net-zero buildings were thought to be impossible to achieve. (See “Zero + Net-Zero Energy Buildings + Homes,” March 2011.) Today, net-positive buildings — those that make more energy than they use — are being built.

 

LATEST CONCERN: CUTTING JOB-SITE CARBON EMISSIONS

This past July, AGC of America formed a Climate Change Task Force to hone in on “the top impacts associated with climate change for construction markets and construction firms.”

Among the task force members are The Beck Group, Clark Construction Group, Linbeck Group, McCarthy Holdings, and Swinerton.

One of the “discussion points” that the AGC Task Force plans to undertake is to “engage with equipment manufacturers to improve energy efficiency and emissions performance without sacrificing safety or power output.”

“Construction activity” accounts for less than 2% of global GHG emissions, but that’s not stopping the nation’s major contractors from pushing construction equipment manufacturers and suppliers to slash carbon emissions on the job site. One sustainability director told me that their firm was committed to cutting on-site GHG emissions by 50% by the end of this decade.

In Northern California, a coalition of GCs called the Bay Area Sustainable Construction Leaders is asking equipment manufacturers and rental companies what they’re doing to electrify their fleets. All the major equipment makers, from Caterpillar to Volvo, know they have to electrify as quickly as possible. Ford has introduced the all-electric F-150 Lightning work truck. Sunbelt Rentals has issued a “Sustainability Plan 2030” that aligns with eight of the 17 UN Sustainable Development Goals. It’s a movement that would have been unheard of 10 years ago,

 

‘SUSTAINABILITY’ NOW ALSO MEANS ‘WELLNESS’ AND ‘RESILIENCE’

These days, “sustainability” is much more than energy savings (although saving energy remains crucial to reducing carbon emissions). Protecting the health and wellness of building occupants, visitors, and staff has become a huge component of sustainability, especially in light of the Covid pandemic. Programs like WELL Certified and Fitwel Ambassadors are addressing AECO professionals’ concerns about healthy buildings, just as the RELi standard is taking on building resilience. The climate change landscape is getting wider and deeper than ever.

 

ProConn SUST blurb art.png

 

NEW ‘PROCONNECT’ PROGRAM ADDRESSES SUSTAINABILITY

This year, in response to the rapidly developing global warming landscape, Building Design+Construction and our parent company, SGC Horizon, have introduced ProCONNECT Sustainability | Wellness | Resilience (Nov 2-3, 2021, 11am to 4:25pm ET).

ProCONNECT Sustainability gives AEC Professionals and Developers with responsibility for high-performance buildings — Chief Sustainability Officers, Directors of Sustainability, LEED Fellows, LFAs, WELL APs, resilience directors, net-zero building experts, and other “climate-action champions” — the opportunity to meet one-on-one with top product manufacturers to discuss their firms’ climate-action, wellness, and resilience agendas and discover practical solutions that can enhance their firms’ high-performance projects.

More than 40 AEC firms, developers, and consultants have committed to participating in ProCONNECT Sustainability. There is no charge for Attendees. To learn more, click here.

Building product manufacturers and suppliers who would like more information about sponsoring ProCONNECT Sustainability can contact: Dan Gardner, dgardner@sgcmail.com, 989.860.7930, or click here.

 

 

Related Stories

Modular Building | Jul 6, 2023

Lennar, Mastry Ventures make multi-million dollar investment in net-zero prefab homes

Mastry Ventures and LENx, the venture arm of homebuilder Lennar, have co-invested in Vessel Technologies’ next-generation housing product.

Apartments | Jun 27, 2023

Dallas high-rise multifamily tower is first in state to receive WELL Gold certification

HALL Arts Residences, 28-story luxury residential high-rise in the Dallas Arts District, recently became the first high-rise multifamily tower in Texas to receive WELL Gold Certification, a designation issued by the International WELL Building Institute. The HKS-designed condominium tower was designed with numerous wellness details.

Green | Jun 26, 2023

Federal government will spend $30 million on novel green building technologies

The U.S. General Services Administration (GSA), and the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) will invest $30 million from the Inflation Reduction Act to increase the sustainability of federal buildings by testing novel technologies. The vehicle for that effort, the Green Proving Ground (GPG) program, will invest in American-made technologies to help increase federal electric vehicle supply equipment, protect air quality, reduce climate pollution, and enhance building performance.

Industrial Facilities | Jun 20, 2023

A new study presses for measuring embodied carbon in industrial buildings

The embodied carbon (EC) intensity in core and shell industrial buildings in the U.S. averages 23.0 kilograms per sf, according to a recent analysis of 26 whole building life-cycle assessments. That means a 300,000-sf warehouse would emit 6,890 megatons of carbon over its lifespan, or the equivalent of the carbon emitted by 1,530 gas-powered cars driven for one year. Those sobering estimates come from a new benchmark study, “Embodied Carbon U.S. Industrial Real Estate.”

Mechanical Systems | Jun 16, 2023

Cogeneration: An efficient, reliable, sustainable alternative to traditional power generation

Cogeneration is more efficient than traditional power generation, reduces carbon emissions, has high returns on the initial investment, improves reliability, and offers a platform for additional renewable resources and energy storage for a facility. But what is cogeneration? And is it suitable for all facilities?

Resiliency | Jun 14, 2023

HUD offers $4.8 billion in funding for green and resilient building retrofit projects

The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) recently released guidelines for its Green and Resilient Retrofit Program (GRRP) that has $4.8 billion for funding green projects.

Mass Timber | Jun 13, 2023

Mass timber construction featured in two-story mixed-use art gallery and wine bar in Silicon Valley

The Edes Building, a two-story art gallery and wine bar in the Silicon Valley community of Morgan Hill, will prominently feature mass timber. Cross-laminated timber (CLT) and glulam posts and beams were specified for aesthetics, biophilic properties, and a reduced carbon footprint compared to concrete and steel alternatives.

Energy-Efficient Design | Jun 5, 2023

Implementing an ‘asset drawdown strategy’ for site decarbonization

Solidifying a decarbonization plan via an “asset drawdown strategy” that carefully considers both capital and operating costs represents a game-changing opportunity for existing properties to compete with new projects.

Urban Planning | May 25, 2023

4 considerations for increasing biodiversity in construction projects

As climate change is linked with biodiversity depletion, fostering biodiverse landscapes during construction can create benefits beyond the immediate surroundings of the project.

Mass Timber | May 23, 2023

Luxury farm resort uses CLT framing and geothermal system to boost sustainability

Construction was recently completed on a 325-acre luxury farm resort in Franklin, Tenn., that is dedicated to agricultural innovation and sustainable, productive land use. With sustainability a key goal, The Inn and Spa at Southall was built with cross-laminated and heavy timber, and a geothermal variant refrigerant flow (VRF) heating and cooling system.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category

Sustainable Design and Construction

Northglenn, a Denver suburb, opens a net zero, all-electric city hall with a mass timber structure

Northglenn, Colo., a Denver suburb, has opened the new Northglenn City Hall—a net zero, fully electric building with a mass timber structure. The 32,600-sf, $33.7 million building houses 60 city staffers. Designed by Anderson Mason Dale Architects, Northglenn City Hall is set to become the first municipal building in Colorado, and one of the first in the country, to achieve the Core certification: a green building rating system overseen by the International Living Future Institute.




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021