AEC Was Left Out of a Key Decarbonization Pilot. What’s Next?
Science-based targets for the building sector no longer apply to design firms and most construction companies, but AEC must continue leading the industry toward net zero, experts say.
It’s 2024. Global emissions—and temperatures—are rising instead of falling, and some scientists believe this will be the year we cross a dangerous climate threshold, the 1.5°C Paris Agreement goal, long before we (hopefully) achieve net-zero emissions in 2050.
Meanwhile, new guidance being piloted through the Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) has removed architecture, engineering, and most construction companies (AEC) as formal participants in building-sector decarbonization, in contrast with the first draft of the guidance. Although the reasons for removing these companies were sound—and SBTi may still develop detailed guidance for the industry in the future, according to the group’s public feedback summary—AEC’s sudden absence brings up questions about the leverage and influence of building practitioners as champions of a just transition away from fossil fuels.
Still, AEC firms need to pay attention, for two reasons:
First, architecture and engineering firms have new obligations when using the general-purpose “cross-sector” guidance.
And second, AEC clients may be eyeing the SBTi guidance to help them decarbonize in sync with their peers.
The guidance is meant to choreograph a coordinated phaseout of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from the building and real estate value chains by 2050.
Waters, E., & Melton, P. (2024, January 17). AEC Was Left Out of a Key Decarbonization Pilot. What’s Next?. Retrieved from https://www.buildinggreen.com/feature/aec-was-left-out-key-decarbonization-pilot-what-s-next