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Global scenarios of urban density and its impacts on building energy use through 2050

  • Date:
  • Author(s)/Creator(s):
    Burak Guneralp
    Yuyu Zhou
    Diana Ürge-Vorsatz
    Mukesh Gupta
    Sha Yu
    Pralit Patel
    Michail Fragkias
    Xiaoma Li
    Karen Seto
Description

Urban density significantly impacts urban energy use and the quality of life of urban residents. Here, the authors provide a global-scale analysis of future urban densities and associated energy use in the built environment under different urbanization scenarios. The relative importance of urban density and energy-efficient technologies varies geographically. In developing regions, urban density tends to be the more critical factor in building energy use. Large-scale retrofitting of building stock later rather than sooner results in more energy savings by the middle of the century. Reducing building energy use, improving the local environment, and mitigating climate change can be achieved through systemic efforts that take potential co-benefits and trade-offs of both higher urban density and building energy efficiency into account.

Using both top-down and bottom-up approaches and scenarios, the authors examine building energy use for heating and cooling. Globally, the energy use for heating and cooling by the middle of the century will be between 45 and 59 exajoules per year (corresponding to an increase of 7–40% since 2010). Most of this variability is due to the uncertainty in future urban densities of rapidly growing cities in Asia and particularly China. Dense urban development leads to less urban energy use overall. Waiting to retrofit the existing built environment until markets are ready in about 5 years to widely deploy the most advanced renovation technologies leads to more savings in building energy use. Potential for savings in energy use is greatest in China when coupled with efficiency gains. Advanced efficiency makes the least difference compared with the business-as-usual scenario in South Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa but significantly contributes to energy savings in North America and Europe. Systemic efforts that focus on both urban form, of which urban density is an indicator, and energy-efficient technologies, but that also account for potential co-benefits and trade-offs with human well-being can contribute to both local and global sustainability. Particularly in growing cities in the developing world, such efforts can improve the well-being of billions of urban residents and contribute to mitigating climate change by reducing energy use in urban areas.

Volume
114
Funder
Y.Z., S.Y., and P.L.P. were supported by the Integrated Assessment Research Program in the Office of Science of the US Department of Energy under Contract DE-AC05-76RL01830. X.L. was supported by the International Postdoctoral Exchange Fellowship Program (2013), the Office of China Postdoctoral Council, and NASA Grant NNH11ZDA001N-LCLUC. K.C.S. and B.G. were both supported by NASA Grants NNX15AD43G and NNX11AE88G.
Policy Quality
6
Subject(s)
Building retrofitting
Climate change mitigation
Energy consumption
Energy efficiency
Heating
Cooling

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