Opinion

Retrospective reporting misses opportunity for whole-life carbon saving

Image: Peter Högström/Dreamstime.com
Project teams are counting the carbon footprint of materials too late. Engaging with suppliers at the early stages of the design process to consider the implications of material selection makes much more sense, says Emma Hines.  

We are living in a world where the visibility of the climate emergency is becoming more and more apparent. In light of the recent publication of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the world’s leading authority on climate science, it is increasingly important for all businesses to consider and analyse their carbon data.

In its latest report published two weeks ago, the IPCC found that within the next two decades, temperatures are likely to rise by more than 1.5oC above pre-industrial levels, breaching the ambition of the 2015 Paris climate agreement, and bringing widespread devastation and extreme weather. Only rapid and drastic reductions in greenhouse gases in this decade can prevent such climate breakdown.

Many project teams are already involved in measuring carbon dioxide reductions – but not always to the best effect. Tarmac recently carried out industry research to better understand attitudes towards project carbon accounting, with the aim of achieving a clearer picture about what the construction sector is doing to evaluate and measure carbon.

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