Quantification of the CO2 Footprint in Residential Construction

  • Don Mah (University of Alberta, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Hole School of Construction. 1-080 Markin/CNRL Natural Resources Engineering Facility) ;
  • Juan D. Manrique (University of Alberta, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Hole School of Construction. 1-080 Markin/CNRL Natural Resources Engineering Facility) ;
  • Haitao Yu (University of Alberta, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Hole School of Construction. 1-080 Markin/CNRL Natural Resources Engineering Facility) ;
  • Mohamed Al-Hussein (Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Hole School of Construction. 3-011 Markin/CNRL Natural Resources Engineering Facility) ;
  • Reza Nasseri (Landmark Group of Builders)
  • Published : 2009.05.27

Abstract

The current residential process adheres to a traditional method of construction involving wood framing on-site on poured concrete foundations which has been widely applied in North America. A conventional residential construction process can include seventeen distinct stages ranging from stake-out to pre-occupancy inspection. The current practice possesses short comings including high construction material wastes, long scheduling timelines, adverse weather conditions, poor quality, low efficiencies and negative environmental impacts from transportation and equipment use. Over CAN $5 billion dollars was spent in the construction sector during 2007 in Canada. Previous findings in CO2 emissions during the construction process of a conventional dwelling emphasize more than 45 tonnes of CO2 emissions. Hence, in Alberta alone during 2007, almost 50,000 residential units would release more than two million tonnes of CO2. These numbers demonstrate the economical and environmental impact in building construction and its relationship with CO2 emissions. The aim of this paper is to quantify the CO2 emissions from the current residential construction process in order to establish the baseline for CO2 emission reduction opportunities. The quantification collection methodology will be approached by identifying the seventeen various stages of construction and quantifying the contributions of CO2 from specific activities and their impacts of work for each stage. The approach of separating these into separate stages for collection will allow for independent opportunities for analysis from various independent contractors from the entire scope of work. The use of BIM will be implemented to efficiently quantify CO2 emissions. Based on the CO2 quantification baseline, emission reduction opportunities such as an industrialized construction process will be introduced that allows homebuilders to reduce the environmental and economical impact of home construction while enabling them to produce higher quality, more energy efficient homes in a safer and shorter period of time.

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