Absolute sustainability assessment of the Danish building sector through prospective LCA

被引:0
|
作者
Horup, Lise [1 ,3 ]
Bruhn, Simon [4 ]
Hoxha, Endrit [2 ]
Birgisdottir, Harpa [2 ]
Secher, Andreas Qvist [3 ]
Ohms, Pernille [3 ]
Hauschild, Michael [1 ]
机构
[1] Department of Environmental and Resource Engineering, Technical University of Denmark, Kongens Lyngby,2800, Denmark
[2] Department of the Built Environment, Aalborg University, Denmark
[3] Rambøll, Denmark
[4] Center for Life Cycle Engineering, University of Southern Denmark, Denmark
关键词
Environmental impact assessments - Green buildings - Life cycle assessment - Sustainable development goals;
D O I
10.1016/j.scitotenv.2025.178780
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
This study examines how a combination of prospective life cycle assessment (pLCA) and absolute environmental sustainability assessment (AESA) can support shaping environmental strategies in the building sector. The paper highlights the benefits of pLCA as a forward-looking approach that integrates technological and socio-economic scenario projections. Through a case study of the Danish building sector, it investigates the potential of technological advancements to meet absolute sustainability targets and explores mitigation strategies to bridge the gap between current impacts and absolute targets. The study covers 16 environmental impact categories. The study identifies which building materials have the strongest potential to mitigate climate impacts and reveals risks of burden shifts towards other impact categories. By modelling future construction in Denmark (2025–2050), the study finds a significant divergence from current consumption patterns and exceedance of the planetary boundaries suggesting that technological advancements cannot alone take construction in Denmark towards sustainable practices. The study therefore suggests a shift towards biobased materials and reduced construction activity as viable mitigation strategies. The study highlights a trade-off between climate change and land use when conventional building materials (concrete, steel etc.) are replaced by biobased materials. Moreover, the study shows that anticipated changes in the background system rely on solutions that will increase some environmental impacts e.g. land use and resource use of metals and minerals. Overall, the findings underline the importance of adjusting current LCA methods to ensure relevant assessments that can support decision making for achieving rapid climate mitigation as expressed by the IPCC and ensure that burdens are not shifted unintentionally. © 2025
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Integrating BIM-Based LCA and Building Sustainability Assessment
    Carvalho, Jose Pedro
    Alecrim, Ismael
    Braganca, Luis
    Mateus, Ricardo
    SUSTAINABILITY, 2020, 12 (18)
  • [2] Leadership through sustainability New challenges for the building sector
    Schneider, C.
    Graubner, C. -A.
    Hock, C.
    BAUINGENIEUR, 2007, 82 : 143 - 149
  • [3] Absolute environmental sustainability assessment of a Danish utility company relative to the Planetary Boundaries
    Ryberg, Morten W.
    Bjerre, Troels K.
    Nielsen, Per Henrik
    Hauschild, Michael
    JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL ECOLOGY, 2021, 25 (03) : 765 - 777
  • [4] Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) of building materials for the evaluation of building sustainability: the case of thermal insulation materials
    Carabano, Rocio
    Ma Hernando, Susana
    Ruiz, Diego
    Bedoya, Cesar
    REVISTA DE LA CONSTRUCCION, 2017, 16 (01): : 22 - 32
  • [5] The environmental sustainability assessment of building ceramic manufacturing based on the LCA-emergy approach
    Zhang, Junxue
    Zhang, He
    Asutosh, Ashish T.
    Sun, Nameng
    Li, Xindi
    ENVIRONMENT DEVELOPMENT AND SUSTAINABILITY, 2023, 27 (3) : 5999 - 6024
  • [6] Building sustainability through a novel exploration of dynamic LCA uncertainty: Overview and state of the art
    Hosamo, Haidar
    Coelho, Guilherme B. A.
    Buvik, Elsa
    Drissi, Sarra
    Kraniotis, Dimitrios
    BUILDING AND ENVIRONMENT, 2024, 264
  • [7] An application of life cycle assessment (LCA) within the Catalonian building sector: A case study
    Ortiz-Rodriguez, Oscar
    Makishi Colodel, Cecilia
    Fischer, Matthias
    Castells, Francesc
    Sonnemann, Guido
    AFINIDAD, 2010, 67 (548) : 262 - 267
  • [8] Implementation of BIM in the Danish Building Sector
    Ussing, Lene Faber
    Larsen, Jesper Kranker
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 7TH WORLD CONFERENCE ON MASS CUSTOMIZATION, PERSONALIZATION, AND CO-CREATION (MCPC 2014) - TWENTY YEARS OF MASS CUSTOMIZATION - TOWARDS NEW FRONTIERS, 2014, : 265 - 273
  • [9] Life cycle inventory improvement in the pharmaceutical sector: assessment of the sustainability combining PMI and LCA tools
    Cespi, Daniele
    Beach, Evan S.
    Swarr, Thomas E.
    Passarini, Fabrizio
    Vassura, I.
    Dunn, Peter J.
    Anastas, Paul T.
    GREEN CHEMISTRY, 2015, 17 (06) : 3390 - 3400
  • [10] A life cycle assessment (LCA)-based approach to guiding an industry sector towards sustainability: the case of the Swedish apparel sector
    Roos, Sandra
    Zamani, Bahareh
    Sandin, Gustav
    Peters, Greg M.
    Svanstrom, Magdalena
    JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION, 2016, 133 : 691 - 700