The property industry has a huge carbon footprint. Here’s how to reduce it
Some buildings should be retrofitted, others torn down
Buildings have a dirty secret: they are among the planet’s worst climate offenders. Heating, cooling and powering existing offices, homes and factories accounts for 27% of global energy-related carbon-dioxide emissions. Constructing new ones involves mountains of steel and colossal amounts of cement, and combined with demolition accounts for another 10% of the global CO2 emitted each year. Building debris generates a third of the European Union’s annual waste by weight.
This article appeared in the Leaders section of the print edition under the headline “Constructive improvements”
Leaders June 18th 2022
- The tricky restructuring of global supply chains
- Latin America’s vicious circle is a warning to the West
- The Fed and the ECB turn on a dime
- The EU should declare Ukraine a candidate for membership
- The property industry has a huge carbon footprint. Here’s how to reduce it
- Britain’s bill to rip up the Northern Ireland protocol is a terrible idea
More from Leaders
Health warnings about alcohol give only half the story
Enjoyment matters as well as risk
Pete Hegseth’s culture war will weaken America’s armed forces
Donald Trump’s nominee for defence risks driving away talent
The capitalist revolution Africa needs
The world’s poorest continent should embrace its least fashionable idea
Just because Indonesia has nickel doesn’t mean it should make EVs
Economic nationalists are making a reckless bet
Donald the Deporter
Could a man who makes ugly promises of mass expulsion actually fix America’s immigration system?
Mark Zuckerberg’s U-turn on fact-checking is craven—but correct
Social-media platforms should not be in the business of defining truth