Shade trees reduce building energy use and CO2 emissions from power plants

被引:388
|
作者
Akbari, H [1 ]
机构
[1] Lawrence Berkeley Lab, Heat Isl Grp, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA
关键词
shade trees; heating and cooling energy use; carbon sequestration; smog; cost-benefit analysis; heat islands;
D O I
10.1016/S0269-7491(01)00264-0
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Urban shade trees offer significant benefits in reducing building air-conditioning demand and improving urban air quality by reducing smog. The savings associated with these benefits vary by climate region and can be up to $200 per tree. The cost of planting trees and maintaining them can vary from $10 to $500 per tree. Tree-planting programs can be designed to have lower costs so that they offer potential savings to communities that plant trees. Our calculations suggest that urban trees play a major role in sequestering CO, and thereby delay global warming. We estimate that a tree planted in Los Angeles avoids the combustion of 18 kg of carbon annually, even though it sequesters only 4.5-11 kg (as it would if growing in a forest). In this sense, one shade tree in Los Angeles is equivalent to three to five forest trees. In a recent analysis for Baton Rouge, Sacramento, and Salt Lake City, we estimated that planting an average of four shade trees per house (each with a top view cross section of 50 m(2)) would lead to an annual reduction in carbon emissions from power plants of 16,000, 41,000, and 9000 t, respectively (the per-tree reduction in carbon emissions is about 10-11 kg per year). These reductions only account for the direct reduction in the net cooling- and heating-energy use of buildings. Once the impact of the community cooling is included, these savings are increased by at least 25%. (C) 2001 Published by Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:S119 / S126
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Uncertainty of energy consumption and CO2 emissions in the building sector in China
    Guo, Yangyang
    Uhde, Helena
    Wen, Wen
    SUSTAINABLE CITIES AND SOCIETY, 2023, 97
  • [42] Energy impact and CO2 emissions of a building with different facade solutions
    Villar-Burke, R.
    Jimenez-Gonzalez, D.
    Larrumbide, E.
    Tenorio, J. A.
    INFORMES DE LA CONSTRUCCION, 2014, 66 (535)
  • [43] Does biomass energy consumption reduce total energy CO2 emissions in the US?
    Kim, GwanSeon
    Choi, Sun-Ki
    Seok, Jun Ho
    JOURNAL OF POLICY MODELING, 2020, 42 (05) : 953 - 967
  • [44] ASSESSMENT OF THE WIND POWER PLANTS ROLE IN CO2 EMISSIONS REDUCING AND ENERGY SUPPLY IN THE REGIONS OF RUSSIA
    Nefedova, L., V
    Degtyarev, K. S.
    Berezkin, M. Yu
    RUSSIAN JOURNAL OF EARTH SCIENCES, 2022, 22 (05):
  • [45] Opportunities to reduce energy consumption and CO2 emissions from ironmaking blast furnace using CO2 electrolysis to CO for carbon recycling
    Hu, Yichao
    Rufford, Thomas E.
    Chen, Jian
    Hao, Liangyuan
    Li, Mengran
    Qiu, Yinxuan
    Garg, Sahil
    Rudolph, Victor
    Wang, Geoff
    JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION, 2023, 389
  • [46] Determining the CO2 Emissions Averted by the Use of Solar Power
    Pinto, Gabriel
    JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL EDUCATION, 2009, 86 (09) : 1033 - 1033
  • [47] Minimum CO2 emissions from IGCC power plants by methanol production with H-2
    Pruschek, R
    Oeljeklaus, G
    Haupt, G
    Zimmermann, G
    HYDROGEN ENERGY PROGRESS XI, VOLS 1-3, 1996, : 1439 - 1446
  • [48] CO2 EMISSIONS FROM POWER SECTOR RISING
    不详
    CHEMICAL & ENGINEERING NEWS, 2014, 92 (24) : 24 - 24
  • [49] EFFECT OF CO2 EMISSIONS FROM COAL FIRED POWER PLANTS - A REVIEW IN PERSPECTIVE.
    Sullivan, K.M.
    1600, (22):
  • [50] Economic growth, CO2 emissions and energy use in Israel
    Magazzino, Cosimo
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT AND WORLD ECOLOGY, 2015, 22 (01): : 89 - 97