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Reports

4 result(s) found

Past visions, current trends, and future context: A review of building energy, carbon, and sustainability

Text
English
Authors:
Na Wang,
Patrick E. Phelan,
Chioke Harris,
Jared Langevin,
Brent Nelson,
Karma Sawyer

People spend most of their time inside buildings, and buildings are responsible for approximately one third of total direct and indirect energy-related worldwide carbon emissions. Likewise, buildings in the U.S. account for about 40% of total U.S. energy consumption. Future building development will be driven not only by emerging challenges such as vulnerability to a changing climate and resource scarcity, but also by disruptive innovations and societal changes.

Ecosystem based adaptation : knowledge gaps in making an economic case for investing in nature based solutions for climate change

Text
English
Authors:
Saima Baig,
Ali Reza Rizvi,
Michael Verdone

Ecosystem-based adaptation (Eba) uses biodiversity and ecosystem services as part of a larger adaptation strategy to climate change. While the conservation and sustainable development community considers EbA to be a strong method of addressing climate change and its associated challenges, there is still a tendency for policy makers to implement traditional engineering solutions for adaptation, rather than investing in EbA.

Policy Challenges for the Built Environment: The Dilemma of the Existing Building Stock

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English
Authors:
MARK SHAURETTE

The built environment accounts for approximately forty percent of the total energy consumption in developed countries. Because buildings have a long life, the greatest opportunity for energy reduction in the built environment will come from energy conservation in the existing building stock. An overview of the policy challenges presented by the built environment, with an emphasis on existing facilities, is accompanied by a discussion of specific technologies that may have the potential to reduce energy use.

Thermally Comfortable Affordable Housing: A Study on Residential Building Code In India

Journal article
Authors:
Sneha Asrani,
Rajan Rawal,
Yash Shah,
Peter Graham,
Priyanka Bhanushali,
Arjun Desai

On an average, India has more than 3000 Cooling Degree Days (CDD). The multifamily public housing being constructed under India’s Prime Minister Awas Yojana (PMAY) is aimed at providing formal housing to the society’s Economic Weaker Section (EWS). It is essential that this housing delivers thermally comfortable in-doors to the occupants. This study mapped the design and construction practices followed under PMAY Urban (PMAY-U) against India’s Residential Energy Building Code, Eco Niwas Samhita (ENS). The metric prescribed in ENS is Residential Envelope Transmittance Value (RETV).

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