14 May 2018
Much more must be done to tackle the amount of climate change pollution produced by New Zealand’s buildings, suggests a
new report released today by a team of international independent sustainability consultants.
The new report by thinkstep, who work with some of the world’s leading companies, shows that New Zealand’s built
environment is culpable for belching out approximately 20 per cent of the climate change pollution emitted by New
Zealand citizens.
Previous estimates, including last month’s report by the Productivity Commission, suggested that our buildings were
responsible for roughly five per cent of emissions – and maybe even as low as two per cent.
But the new report shows that buildings could amount to 20 per cent of New Zealand’s carbon footprint when considering
their lifetime ‘embodied’ emissions, and the products and services that New Zealanders consume – rather than those that
are destined for offshore markets.
The new findings are hugely significant, says the New Zealand Green Building Council, who are backing the study, because
it means that the Government should increase resources and efforts to reduce emissions from our buildings.
Buildings produce carbon pollution when using energy for things like heating and lighting, and also during their
construction, when pollution is emitted through the extraction of raw materials and the manufacture of building
products.
The thinkstep report arrives at the larger figure for the climate emissions of buildings than previous studies because
it uses a different methodology, which is widely applied internationally and has been utilised by organisations such as
the European Commission, Danish Government, the National Bureau of Economic Research in the USA, and Motu Economic and
Public Policy Research here in New Zealand.
This approach differs as it allocates emissions to a sector at the point of consumption, rather than production, and
because it considers the entire life cycle of buildings, including the extraction of raw materials, material production,
the electricity and energy use of the building, and the treatment of construction waste.
Jeff Vickers, Technical Director of thinkstep in Australasia and lead author of the report, said: “Buildings and
infrastructure are some of the longest-lived parts of our society, so it is crucial that we act now to reduce their
contribution to climate change pollution – both through reducing emissions from energy used during the building’s life
and through reducing the emissions embodied in the building products that we choose. Embodied emissions are increasingly
being provided by building product manufacturers through Environmental Product Declarations.”
Sam Archer, technical director of the New Zealand Green Building Council said: “The Government is taking some very
welcome steps to cut our levels of climate change pollution.
“But they really do need to do more to tackle the emissions of our buildings, which make up a significant portion of our
overall pollution.
“If they do, they’ll ensure that our families will live in a cleaner, less polluted Aotearoa, and will also ensure that
we’ll achieve our important international obligations to tackle climate change.”
The full report is available here.
ends