Abstract

The building sector has gradually become a major contributor of carbon emissions in recent years. Its carbon emissions, which result from the long heating period and considerable consumption of coal in residential buildings during operation, must be reduced. To this end, the long-range energy alternatives planning system was adopted for the forecasting of carbon emissions in baseline scenarios, energy-saving, energy-saving–low-carbon, and low-carbon. On the basis of these predictions, the contributions of heating, cooling, cooking, illumination, washing, and other activities to carbon emissions were analyzed. The influencing factors in the reduction of carbon emissions from residential buildings in a cold region were identified. The results showed that energy-saving–low-carbon was the optimal scenario to reduce carbon emissions. Meanwhile, carbon emissions will peak in 2030, with a value of 42.06 Mt under the same scenario. As the top three influencing factors, heating, cooling, and cooking contribute 55.74%, 18.86%, and 17.29% of carbon emissions, respectively. Sensitivity results showed the differential effects of 32 factors on the reduction of carbon emissions in residential buildings. Carbon emissions could be reduced by 17.41%, 35.51%, 31.10%, and 14.10% by controlling the building scale, heating, cooling, and cooking, respectively. To this end, seven factors, including the rationing of central heating, were identified. Then, pathways to reducing carbon emissions were proposed under different scenarios. The present research fills the gap between reality and the predicted pathway, considering the heterogeneity of the climate.

Highlights

  • Global climate change attracts interest from the government and the scientific community [1]

  • The results showed that population, urbanization, and economic development led to an accelerated increase in carbon emissions from the residential building sector in developing countries

  • The results showed that the carbon emissions from cooking activities accounted for 50% of total emissions in buildings under the four scenarios

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Global climate change attracts interest from the government and the scientific community [1]. Carbon emissions are widely regarded as a leading cause of climate change. The construction sector has gradually become a major source of carbon emissions in recent years. Reducing the carbon emissions caused by the construction sector is a major challenge in mitigating climate change [2]. To estimate the carbon emissions from residential buildings in different periods, previous research has performed extensive life cycle assessments [3,4]. Such research has demonstrated that the majority of carbon emissions arise during the operation period [5,6,7]. Research on carbon emissions reduction has focused on exercising control over emissions from residential buildings during the operation period [8]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call