Researchers at Kyushu University have published a comprehensive analysis on the carbon footprint of constructing a wooden house in Japan.
Researchers at Kyushu University have published a comprehensive analysis on the carbon footprint of constructing a wooden house in Japan. The study covered the total amount of emissions produced, taking into consideration the entire supply chain including the processing and transport of the raw materials that go into building a house.
The team hopes that by identifying emission hot spots in the supply chain that go into building a house, policy makers can implement strategies to reduce its climate impact. Their analysis was published in the Journal of Environmental Management.
As humanity maneuvers itself through the climate crisis, researchers and industry professionals alike have been working to identify sectors with high CO2 emissions so they can implement policies that potentially reduce greenhouse gas production. But in today’s highly interconnected economy, figuring out a sector or object’s greenhouse gas output is astoundingly complex.
Read more at Kyushu University
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