ASHRAE Commits to Broad Building Decarbonization Initiatives in New Position Document

ASHRAE has issued a position document on building decarbonization and its role on mitigating the negative carbon impact of buildings on the environment.

ASHRAE Position Document on Building Decarbonization presents the Society’s positions and recommendations for achieving a reduction in emissions through the renovation of existing building stock and improvements to new building designs.

“Building decarbonization encompasses a building’s entire life-cycle, including building design, construction, operation, occupancy, and end of life,” said 2022–23 ASHRAE President Farooq Mehboob, Fellow ASHRAE. “ASHRAE is leading the charge in accelerating the mitigation of carbon resulting from energy use in the built environment by providing this roadmap to further our Society’s mission of a healthy and sustainable built environment for all.”

ASHRAE’s position is that decarbonization of buildings and its systems must be based on a holistic analysis including healthy, safe, and comfortable environments, energy efficiency, environmental impacts, sustainability, operational security, and economics.

By 2030, the global built environment must at least halve its 2015 greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, whereby:

  • All new buildings are net-zero GHG emissions in operation.
  • Widespread energy-efficiency retrofit of existing assets are well underway.
  • Embodied carbon of new construction is reduced by at least 40 percent.

Additional positions and recommendations include the following:

  • Increased stringency and enforcement of energy codes are critical for decarbonization.
  • Whole Building Life-Cycle Assessment must be considered in future building codes to reduce embodied and operational GHG emissions related to buildings and their HVAC&R systems.
  • Building Performance Standards (BPS) should be considered as a policy tool for existing building decarbonization.
  • Decarbonization policies must contemplate and mitigate impacts on disadvantaged communities and less-developed nations.
  • Building decarbonization strategies and policies must consider healthy, safe, and comfortable environments; environmental and social impacts; sustainability; resilience; and economics.
  • Promote research and development of heat pump technology.
  • Support the development, update, and adoption of relevant standards and guidelines that facilitate the whole life reduction of GHG emissions from new and existing buildings.
  • Encourage greater collaboration and the development of standards and guidelines among the energy, transportation, and building sectors to improve secure building-grid integration, data communication, and optimization of energy performance (generation, use, and storage).
  • Work in partnership with industry to increase the capacity and opportunities for a skilled workforce supporting building decarbonization.

View the complete position document at ashrae.org/decarb.

“ASHRAE’s strength is providing the industry with practical solutions, guidance, and tools to develop science-based approaches to decarbonize the built environment on a global scale,” said ASHRAE Task Force for Building Decarbonization (TFBD) Chair Kent Peterson. “ASHRAE’s technical guidance, standards, and training have long been the basis for high-performing buildings and GHG emission-reduction strategies, and this position document will amplify our efforts towards a more sustainable future for all.”

The ASHRAE TFBD is seeking working group members for the development of six decarbonization guides and corresponding training courses. To learn more about the areas of expertise needed and how to apply, visit ashrae.org/decarb. The application deadline is July 15.

Additionally, registration opens on July 15 for the International Building Decarbonization 2022 Conference, October 5–7 in Athens, Greece. Organized by the ASHRAE TFBD and the Hellenic Chapter, the conference is intended to provide an exchange of ideas to bridge North American and European collaboration on reducing carbon emissions in buildings.

Source: ASHRAE

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