- General
- Posted
WorldGBC launches green building policy principles for governments
This article was originally published in issue 44 of Passive House Plus magazine. Want immediate access to all back issues and exclusive extra content? Click here to subscribe for as little as €15, or click here to receive the next issue free of charge
The principles, developed by WorldGBC with its network of 75+ green building councils, were released ahead of the G7 ministers’ meeting on climate, energy and environment on 15–16 April, and take into account sobering analysis from the latest Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report, and the conclusion that there is a rapidly closing window of opportunity to implement policies that will keep the world within the 1.5 C warming limit.
Many of the priority topics for the G7 ministers meeting can be addressed by buildings — from achieving both energy security and net zero, to advancing the transition to circular economies.
Worldwide, buildings are responsible for 37 per cent of energy-related carbon emissions and 34 per cent of energy demand. With such a significant environmental and carbon impact, leaders and policymakers must recognise the built environment as a key agent of change to close the 1.5 C gap.
WorldGBC and its network have launched “Global Policy Principles for a Sustainable Built Environment”, to support policymakers around the world to adopt a holistic approach to built environment sustainability, and ensure that new and updated policies and legislations deliver the transformative action needed to reach the Paris Agreement and the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals.
The principles are structured around seven key focus areas: carbon, resilience, circularity, water, biodiversity, health, equity and access. These areas are supported by detailed policy levers to show how they can be effectively implemented through regulation, information and incentives. Despite being the largest contributing sector to carbon emissions, the building and construction industry is still not on track to achieve total decarbonisation by 2050, meaning the gap between actual climate performance of the sector and its pathway to decarbonisation is widening.
This creates a dual challenge for the built environment — with markets in Asia and Africa expecting their building stock to double by mid-century. Meanwhile other regions are grappling with the challenges of renovating energy inefficient buildings.
Cristina Gamboa, CEO, WorldGBC, said: “Our sector is in a strong position to deliver resilient development that integrates mitigation and adaptation measures, whilst also addressing other pressing societal issues, including energy security, resilience, health and equity. In this global stocktake of the Paris Agreement year, and ahead of countries submitting updated nationally determined contributions (NDCs) in 2024, it is crucial that political leaders take bold actions to strengthen and implement building policies that deliver transformative change.”
By supporting the delivery of these principles, governments will be sending a clear signal to the market that decarbonised built environments are a priority, therefore enabling industry to deliver more innovative solutions. But governments must take a holistic approach, embracing public funding and influencing financial investment decisions and tools that consider carbon mitigation, resilience and green buildings.
WorldGBC and its green building council network invite governments to use “Global Policy Principles for a Sustainable Built Environment” as a tool to review and update existing legislation; as well as offering their support within a local and global context.
Download the report here: https://tinyurl.com/WorldGBCreport.
Related items
- Sisk-led consortium secures £500,000 fund from Innovate UK
- Green homes a “multi-trillion euros opportunity” – but greenwashing must end
- Study: gas cooking killing 40,000 Europeans per year
- Traditional homes retrofit grant pilot launched
- £30m passive scheme launched in Down
- 80% subsidy for range of sustainable micro-credential courses