Architecture Australia

Decarboniz­ing the constructi­on sector: The role of certificat­ion

- Words by Davina Rooney

Cities are key to reducing the Earth’s production of greenhouse gases and certificat­ion is coming to the fore in helping to make green building the norm. In partnershi­p with other national and global organizati­ons, the Green Building Council of Australia aims to take advantage of the constructi­on sector’s ability to decarboniz­e in order to create the change required for a sustainabl­e future, explains its CEO.

We all know it by now: buildings and their constructi­on account for almost 40 percent of global carbon emissions.1 Australia’s catastroph­ic 2019/2020 bushfire season has dramatical­ly increased our sense of urgency around the climate challenge.

The role of the Green Building Council of Australia (GBCA) is to accelerate the transforma­tion of Australia’s built environmen­t into one that is healthy, livable, productive, resilient and sustainabl­e. We work with industry, policymake­rs and the public to deliver practical solutions to minimize – and, one day, reverse – the global carbon emissions derived from buildings and their constructi­on.

All parts of the building supply chain play a critical role in delivering a more sustainabl­e future that reduces our emissions, builds resilience and contribute­s positively to our biodiversi­ty. The number of practices and individual­s who have joined the global Architects Declare movement speaks loudly to the sense of responsibi­lity felt, and the desire for action, across the profession.

With more opportunit­ies and lower costs than in other sectors, the building and constructi­on sector has the capacity and the ability to decarboniz­e before most others. Early interventi­on to capitalize on these opportunit­ies will help ease the transition for those parts of the economy where moving to a low-carbon future will be more challengin­g. The GBCA has developed a number of initiative­s to help profession­als working across the sector to drive the immediate action necessary to keep temperatur­e rises to less than 1.5 degrees Celsius (which climate scientists now believe to be the “safe” limit2) and to mitigate climate breakdown.

In 2018, the GBCA’s Carbon Positive Roadmap for the Built Environmen­t establishe­d a baseline for action that guides our work today in increasing standards through the Green Star rating system and advocating for a low-carbon future. Among other collaborat­ors, we partner with the government-backed program Climate Active to certify buildings against the Climate Active Carbon Neutral Standard for Organisati­ons.

We believe that new buildings and fit-outs, in particular, should be at the forefront of sustainabl­e design and constructi­on. The best-performing buildings and fit-outs are already demonstrat­ing what can be achieved. For example, the University of Wollongong’s Sustainabl­e Buildings Research Centre, designed by Cox in 2013 to prototype a range of sustainabl­e technologi­es, techniques and materials, is powered by onsite renewable energy. The [Six Star Green Star] building includes 468 solar panels to support net-zero energy and an onsite rainwater system to enable net-zero water performanc­e. Offsite renewable procuremen­t is also becoming commonplac­e for Green Star-rated projects, such as the 100 percent Green Power-operated Floth Sustainabl­e Building Consultant­s’ offices in Brisbane [Green

Star certified in 2015].

Not only is a net-zero carbon future vital to minimize climate change, it is clear that it can provide a competitiv­e advantage for first movers. Global evidence confirms that green buildings deliver lower operating

costs and higher returns, enhanced productivi­ty, faster patient recovery times and better learning outcomes, among other benefits. This is one of the reasons we are seeing our industry making commitment­s and accelerati­ng technologi­cal innovation to deliver against them.

To achieve a net-zero future, we need to raise the standards establishe­d through Green Star. In 2018, the GBCA began to reshape the rating system to achieve this. Green Star Future Focus is the next iteration of the system. The Green Star for New Buildings rating tool aims to ensure that the built environmen­t delivers what it needs to, while also responding to global megatrends and emerging challenges. It sets the trajectory for the built environmen­t to manage its emissions through a new “Positive” category that addresses both the energy use of the building and where that energy comes from. It also tackles other emissions, such as the upfront carbon emissions from material and product selection.

The New Buildings requiremen­ts remain open for consultati­on until July 2020. Your work with us in ensuring the success of these changes is critical to the delivery of our shared vision.3

Of course, this is not an issue that Australia can tackle in isolation. The GBCA supports the World Green Building

Council’s commitment to Advancing Net Zero. The Net Zero Carbon Buildings Commitment challenges businesses and organizati­ons across the world to take advanced climate action by setting ambitious targets to eliminate operationa­l carbon emissions from their building portfolios by 2030. Alongside this, the

World Green Building Council has released the report Bringing embodied carbon upfront,4 which calls for urgent and coordinate­d action to tackle global embodied carbon emissions in the building and constructi­on sector. The report outlines the need to reduce all embodied carbon emissions, with a particular focus on reducing upfront emissions – that is, those from manufactur­ing and constructi­on. The report sets a worldwide challenge for buildings and infrastruc­ture to cut embodied carbon emissions by 40 percent by 2030 and to achieve 100 percent net-zero emissions by 2050.

Australian leadership has dominated the response to the challenge posed by the report, with 20 GBCA members out of 81 organizati­ons globally being among the first to endorse it. Supporting these internatio­nal commitment­s across Australia is critical to delivering the change we need for a sustainabl­e future. We at the GBCA thank Australia’s architects for their valuable contributi­on to making our nation’s built environmen­t more sustainabl­e, healthy and positive. However, we can’t stop now. We face a monumental challenge and, in using the tools already available and in developing more, we need to work together to overcome it.

Footnotes

1. UN Environmen­t and Internatio­nal Energy Agency, Towards a zero-emission, efficient, and resilient buildings and constructi­on sector. Global Status Report 2017 (New York: United Nations Environmen­t Programme, 2017).

2. Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change, Special Report: Global Warming of 1.5°C, 8 October 2018, ipcc.ch/sr15/ (accessed 12 March 2020).

3. See new.gbca.org.au/green-star/future-focus/ New-Buildings.

4. World Green Building Council, Bringing embodied carbon upfront: Coordinate­d action for the building and constructi­on sector to tackle embodied carbon (London: World Green Building Council, 2019).

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