Abstract

The ongoing global climate change and the associated environmental degradation pose a threat to Europe and the rest of the world. Raw materials and energy are required to produce building materials, which are used for construction purposes. Resulting buildings and structures generate waste during construction, operation, and demolition, and they emit potentially harmful substances. Thus, the key to achieving climate goals is to support low-emission materials and technologies in the construction sector, significantly impacting the environment. In the European Union, building materials are not yet subject to mandatory sustainability assessment during the assessment and verification of constancy of performance (AVCP). Objective evaluation of construction materials’ environmental impact requires it to be carried out based on production data on an industrial scale. This article presents the environmental impact of premixed gypsum-based plasters, commonly used in modern construction. Nine environmental indicators (global warming potential (GWP), depletion potential of the stratospheric ozone layer (ODP), acidification potential (AP), eutrophication potential (EP), formation potential of tropospheric ozone (POCP), abiotic depletion potential (ADP)-elements, ADP-fossil fuels, renewable primary energy resources (PERT), and nonrenewable primary energy resources (PERNT)) of premixed gypsum plasters based on natural and flue gas desulfurization (FGD) gypsum were estimated and discussed. Knowledge of the construction products’ environmental impact is fundamental for creating reliable databases. AVCP of construction materials in the future will use the data collected during the voluntary environmental impact evaluation.

Highlights

  • The coronavirus pandemic shows even more clearly how much the Earth needs a break from excessive human activity

  • Global warming potential (GWP); Depletion potential of the stratospheric ozone layer (ODP); Acidification potential of soil and water (AP); Eutrophication potential (EP); Formation potential of tropospheric ozone (POCP); Abiotic depletion potential (ADP-elements; ADP-el.) for nonfossil resources; Abiotic depletion potential (ADP-fossil fuels; ADP-ff.) for fossil resources; Total use of renewable primary energy resources (PERT); Total use of nonrenewable primary energy resources (PENRT)

  • For gypsum plasters based on flue gas desulfurization (FGD) gypsum, the total use of renewable and total nonrenewable primary energy sources is similar

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Summary

Introduction

The coronavirus pandemic shows even more clearly how much the Earth needs a break from excessive human activity. The reduction of greenhouse gas emissions in 2020 in connection with the actions taken in response to the threat of COVID-19 infection will lead to a slight decrease in the annual rate of increase in CO2 concentration in the atmosphere, practically indistinguishable from the natural interannual variability [1]. This information may be a bit surprising when compared to the extreme restrictions we experienced last year due to COVID-19, which, in April 2020, led to daily declines in CO2 emissions from fossil fuels by 11–25% [2].

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