2008
DOI: 10.1680/ener.2008.161.2.87
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Embodied energy and carbon in construction materials

Abstract: The development of an open-access, reliable database for embodied energy and carbon (dioxide) emissions associated with the construction industry is described. The University of Bath's inventory of carbon and energy database lists almost 200 different materials. The data were extracted from peer-reviewed literature on the basis of a defined methodology and a set of five criteria. The database was made publicly available via an online website and has attracted significant interest from industry, academia, gover… Show more

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Cited by 532 publications
(457 citation statements)
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References 21 publications
(39 reference statements)
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“…The framework of Figure 1 is applied to compare between the two available construction methods. Embodied carbon emission factors are derived from databases such as [13], [14], whereas cost rates and crew productivity rates are obtained from RSMeans and Cordell [15], [16]. Common workflow patterns adopted for both construction operations are shown in Figure 2.…”
Section: Case Examplementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The framework of Figure 1 is applied to compare between the two available construction methods. Embodied carbon emission factors are derived from databases such as [13], [14], whereas cost rates and crew productivity rates are obtained from RSMeans and Cordell [15], [16]. Common workflow patterns adopted for both construction operations are shown in Figure 2.…”
Section: Case Examplementioning
confidence: 99%
“…According to a statistical analysis from UNEP (2014), at least one third of global energy use is attributable to buildings but materials with high insulation performance can minimise energy consumption (Castleton et al 2010). Bamboo panels, as for all bio-based materials, have a favourable life-cycle performance (Hammond and Jones 2008).…”
Section: Eq 1;mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For the calculation of the embodied energy and carbon of the raw materials contained in the device, the UK-oriented Inventory of Carbon and Energy (version 1.6a) has been used [6]. The information contained in the inventory was collected from secondary sources in the public domain, including journal articles, LCAs and books.…”
Section: B Materials Embodied Energy and Carbonmentioning
confidence: 99%