Abstract

Currently, there is no clear and unified understanding about the status quo of China's energy consumption in the building sector. In addition, a considerable underestimation of energy associated with buildings has impeded the effective implementation of measures to improve building energy efficiency of China. Thus, in this paper, we seek to identify the building sector's energy consumption of China by establishing an estimation model of building energy consumption from a life cycle perspective. On the basis of macro-level statistical data and relevant literature, we analyze the activities in each phase and calculate associated energy consumptions throughout buildings’ whole life cycle in China from 2001 to 2013. The results show that China's energy consumption associated with buildings has reached 1.66 billion tons coal equivalent in 2013, with a stable growth rate of 7% annually since 2001. Buildings’ life-cycle energy has approximately accounted for 43% of China's total energy consumption for recent three years (2011–2013). What's more, energy consumption in buildings’ operation phase has been salient, accounting for over 20% of China's total energy consumption. More focus should be drawn on energy efficiency in building material production phase and energy consumed in China's rural residential buildings as both have been significantly neglected.

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