flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Arup kicks off its commitment to lifecycle carbon assessments

Energy-Efficient Design

Arup kicks off its commitment to lifecycle carbon assessments

Goal is to provide insights that guide clients’ design decisions.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | June 16, 2022
Alternative approaches to reducing embodied carbon
There are several ways to reduce embodied carbon in buildings. Arup is using data collected from its projects to advise its clients on the best design strategies. Image: Courtesy of World Building Council for Sustainable Development, and Arup

Since April, Arup, the global built environment consultant, has been gathering data on an undisclosed number of buildings it has worked as a prelude to its commitment, which commenced this month, to conduct whole lifecycle carbon assessments for all of its construction and renovation projects going forward.

Those assessments will attempt to estimate a building’s carbon emissions from pre- and post construction, and encompass such variables as manufacturing, transportation, materials selection, operations, and maintenance. Arup estimates that as much as half of a building’s lifecycle CO2 emissions is attributable to embodied carbon before the building is operational.

Arup’s goal through its commitment is to confidently advise its developer-owner clients, within budgetary and quality parameters, on what products for each of a building’s systems and subsystems will produce the least amount of carbon emissions during a building’s duration. “We’re attempting to build our insights so that CO2 becomes a performance metric,” explains Erin McConahey, PE, FASHRAE, Principal and Arup Fellow. What’s been lacking—and what Arup is trying to address with its assessments—has been a critical mass of data.

ASSESSMENTS REQUIRED MORE DATA

When it announced its commitment last November, Arup stated that fewer than 1 percent of building projects was evaluated to quantify carbon emissions over their lifecycles.

Adopting whole lifecycle carbon assessments is essential to Arup’s and the building sector’s shared ambition to reduce projects’ carbon emissions 50 percent by 2030. The insights gained from conducting thousands of whole lifecycle carbon assessments each year “will help the built environment sector advance toward net zero,” stated the firm, which is developing similar methodology to extend its assessments to its infrastructure work.

Using a digital platform it devised, hundreds of project teams at Arup have been collecting carbon data on several of its 1,300 projects that met certain dollar thresholds of activity within the last fiscal year, and on whose design Arup was directly involved, says McConahey. That platform leverages materials information from measuring tools such as the Embodied Carbon in Construction Calculator (EC3), whose database allows users to compare materials for their embodied carbon impact; and Environmental Product Declarations (EPDs), through which manufacturers present objective, third-party verified data to report on the impact of their products and services.

McConahey says that, at present, manufacturers “are the only source of truth” when it comes to lifecycle carbon assessments of their own products. She adds that more contractors are asking for EPDs as part of their bidding and estimating.

DESIGNING FOR CARBON REDUCTION

The data that Arup has been assembling will allow the firm to review and adjust its design practices “using carbon rules of thumb,” says McConahey. Early next year, Arup intends to share some of its top-line insights with the industry, with an aspiration of providing a blueprint for the built environment’s path toward net zero.

Arup’s commitment is part of an ever-growing focus on environmental, social, and governance topics and reporting for construction and engineering firms. “Health, safety and labor; contracts and competitive bidding; and carbon emissions from buildings and construction form the backbone of their ESG agendas,” wrote the accounting and management consultant EY in a paper it posted last November about the state of ESG in the engineering and construction industry.

That paper found that among the 24 engineering and construction companies reviewed, leaders were making disclosures against at least 20 of 24 metrics covering ESG issues. This level of transparency is being driven by investors that evaluate ESG performance on corporate disclosures; and by Millennial workers who are three times more likely to seek employment with a company because of its stances on environmental and/or social issues.

Related Stories

| Apr 20, 2012

Registration open for Solar Power International 2012 in Orlando

President Bill Clinton to deliver keynote address at ?largest solar energy event in the Americas.

| Apr 19, 2012

KTGY Group’s Arista Uptown Apartments in Broomfield, Colo. completed

First of eight buildings highlights unique amenities.

| Apr 19, 2012

Nauset begins work on $20M Joint Forces HQ at Hanscom AFB

3D imaging key to project timetable and cost containment.

| Apr 18, 2012

Lafarge moving North American headquarters to Illinois

Lafarge CEO John Stull says the factors in their decision were location in the Midwest and area transportation.

| Apr 18, 2012

Positive conditions persist for Architecture Billings Index

The AIA reported the March ABI score was 50.4, following a mark of 51.0 in February; greatest demand is for commercial building projects.

| Apr 17, 2012

Princeton Review releases “Guide to 322 Green Colleges”

The guide profiles 322 institutions of higher education in the U.S. and Canada that demonstrate notable commitments to sustainability in their academic offerings, campus infrastructure, activities and career preparation.

| Apr 17, 2012

FMI report examines federal construction trends

Given the rapid transformations occurring in the federal construction sector, FMI examines the key forces accelerating these changes, as well as their effect on the industry.

| Apr 17, 2012

Freese and Nichols awarded Malcolm Baldridge National Quality Award

Freese and Nichols is the only engineering and architecture firm to ever receive this recognition.

| Apr 17, 2012

Miramar College police substation in San Diego receives LEED Platinum

The police substation is the first higher education facility in San Diego County to achieve LEED Platinum Certification, the highest rating possible.

| Apr 17, 2012

Alberici receives 2012 ASA General Contractor of the Year award

Alberici has been honored by the ASA eight times in the award’s nineteen-year history--more than any other general contractor in its class.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021