2023
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.2c06418
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Review of Urban Building Types and Their Energy Use and Carbon Emissions in Life-Cycle Analyses from Low- and Middle-Income Countries

Abstract: Urbanization, slum redevelopment, and population growth will lead to unprecedented levels of residential building construction in “low- and middle-income” (LMI) countries in the coming decades. However, less than 50% of previous residential building life-cycle assessment (LCA) reviews included LMI countries. Moreover, all reviews that included LMI countries only considered formal (cement–concrete) buildings, while more than 800 million people in these countries lived in informal settlements. We analyze LCA lit… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Different emission reduction strategies can be modeled by making simple changes to the model parameters. FIG′s idea of bootstrapping over existing neighborhood designs is increasingly applicable to many countries with recent improvements in infrastructure data; global horizontal infrastructure databases like GRIP and census tables have become widely available with sufficient details to act as model inputs, and researchers have made big strides in generating location-specific housing and material use data ,, for the United States, Europe, and middle/low-income countries within the last 3–5 years . As global data availability increases, FIG provides a powerful approach for harnessing these data to analyze future embodied GHG emissions and potential reduction pathways.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Different emission reduction strategies can be modeled by making simple changes to the model parameters. FIG′s idea of bootstrapping over existing neighborhood designs is increasingly applicable to many countries with recent improvements in infrastructure data; global horizontal infrastructure databases like GRIP and census tables have become widely available with sufficient details to act as model inputs, and researchers have made big strides in generating location-specific housing and material use data ,, for the United States, Europe, and middle/low-income countries within the last 3–5 years . As global data availability increases, FIG provides a powerful approach for harnessing these data to analyze future embodied GHG emissions and potential reduction pathways.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%