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Brussels 19/09/08 – CEMBUREAU, the European Cement Association, participated yesterday in an interesting debate on sustainable housing entitled ‘Towards a European policy for sustainable housing’ held at the European Parliament. This key event raised many important issues which require urgent attention at European Union level. Of notable importance is the need to take into consideration the whole–life cycle of a structure, rather than the individual products. Taken over a 60-year service life, 90% of CO2 emissions occur during the in-use phase (from heating, cooling & lighting) and 10% result from the embodied energy used to produce the fabric of the building itself – of which the impact of the manufacturing of construction materials is only 2-3%.
This debate has reinforced the key role that the European manufacturing industry will have to play in building sustainable houses and hence the need for competitive and efficient building materials. Security of supply is of strategic importance not only for electricity, but also for building materials, and should be taken into account in all debates, more particularly when considering the risks of carbon leakage, i.e substituting imports to domestic EU production, thereby relocating CO2 emissions.
Buildings account for around 40% of energy consumption in the EU. In a new building, concrete has a lot to offer because its thermal mass does reduce daily and seasonal temperature variations and, therefore, less energy is required for heating and/or cooling and less CO2 is emitted. An additional, but nonetheless important, point relates to the regulatory framework. This needs to be reinforced to ensure that specifiers give more attention to a net CO2 approach by focusing on the holistic performance (including energy) of the whole building during its whole life cycle (rather than the environmental footprint of construction materials on their own).
More information: Concrete for energy-efficient buildings. The benefits of thermal mass
CONTACT
Jessica JOHNSON, Head of Communications
Tel.: + 32 2 234 10 11
Fax : + 32 2 230 47 20
aj.johnson@cembureau.eu
www.cembureau.eu
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Jessica JOHNSON
Head of Communications
Tel: +32 2 234 10 11
communications@CEMBUREAU.eu