Support for Nonprofit Continues to Grow as Building Industry Focuses on Reducing Embodied Carbon Emissions
Building Transparency is proud to celebrate the two-year anniversary of its nonprofit status – an important milestone for its efforts to reduce embodied carbon emissions and foster a better building future. Since its founding in January 2020, the organization endeavors to provide the resources and education necessary to enable embodied carbon action through its open access data and tools.
The nonprofit has seen exponential usage growth of its cornerstone tool, the Embodied Carbon in Construction Calculator (EC3), and continues to introduce new and expand upon current programs to drive awareness and enable action in addressing embodied carbon’s role in climate change.
“2021 was a monumental year for Building Transparency and for our industry at-large as we saw increased interest in understanding and reducing embodied carbon emissions in our built spaces from owners, manufacturers, designers and, notably, policymakers,” explained Stacy Smedley, Executive Director of Building Transparency. “Leaders in the building and construction sector are prioritizing low-carbon procurement and global companies are considering their building portfolio as they set time-bound goals for reducing their carbon footprint. All of this means that our resources and tools are more important than ever as more individuals look to understand and measure their embodied carbon footprint.”
A Nonprofit Enabled by Cross-Industry Partnerships
Building Transparency has signed on an impressive roster of more than 20 partners from global technology and sustainability companies since 2020. This list includes organizations like Breakthrough Energy, Microsoft, Skanska, Autodesk, Interface, Google, Amazon and Salesforce. As it looks toward 2022, the nonprofit will add additional partner organizations from diverse industries, signaling increasing awareness and prioritization of building-related carbon emissions.
Additionally, the organization has partnered with leading construction software platforms, including Autodesk Revit and BIM 360, to launch plug-ins of its EC3 tool, making it easier to look at overall embodied carbon emissions for construction projects. In 2022, Building Transparency will continue to explore additional integrations that will make it easier to consider embodied carbon at all stages of a project’s lifecycle.
EC3 Continues to Enable Low-Carbon Procurement Decisions
The nonprofit manages and continues the development of the free and easy-to-use EC3, a tool to drive low-carbon procurement decisions to achieve zero-carbon, resilient and healthy built spaces. The tool now has more than 20,000 users from over 70 countries who are measuring, comparing and reducing the embodied carbon of their buildings. Today, EC3 supports over 2,200 building projects.
EC3 utilizes Environmental Product Declarations (EPDs), which are technical documents describing the environmental impact of making a product. EPDs ensure the industry has a standardized way of disclosing the environmental impacts of materials and products to enable the most carbon-conscious procurement decisions. Today, the tool contains more than 80,000 product-specific EPDs across material categories, helping users realize more reductions in embodied carbon emissions.
The organization continues to add new material categories, including Data Cabling, Resilient Flooring, Single Ply Membrane Roofing and Cement in 2021. In 2022, it looks to add Asphalt, Cladding and Glazing Assemblies. In addition, Building Transparency is focused on filling EPD data gaps in global markets, including the APAC region where it’s welcomed the Obayashi Corporation as a pilot partner.
Nonprofit’s Programs Continue to Expand
In 2021, Building Transparency launched ownersCAN (Carbon Action Network), a sister program to materialsCAN. These two groups bring together global leaders to address the impact of embodied carbon within the built environment sector. Members are committed to acting on the smart prioritization of embodied carbon in building materials and driving a better understanding of the carbon footprint of projects across the industry.
ownersCAN is comprised of owners, developers, users and managers of buildings who are dedicated to measuring and reducing the embodied carbon of their projects. It currently includes a group of 25 owners, with founding members including Facebook, GSA, LinkedIn and the San Francisco International Airport, who are committed to driving embodied carbon awareness, creating and sharing best practice tools, and sharing case studies of implementing strategies to reduce embodied carbon emissions. Most recently, this includes continuing to expand its Embodied Carbon Action Plan (ECAP) with free, downloadable templates and resources. The latest addition is downloadable project specification language that makes it easier to reduce the embodied carbon of buildings during design, construction and operation.
materialsCAN achieved a significant milestone at the start of 2022 – all its member organizations from the global building industry have either committed to or already set a Science Based Target, or a GHG reduction target that will help keep global temperatures from rising above 1.5 degrees Celsius compared to pre-industrial levels. Notably, science-based targets include reductions in Scope 3 emissions, which includes the necessary reduction of embodied carbon of the materials they produce as manufacturers. Having all materialsCAN members commit to targets that are science-based should inspire others in the building industry to consider evaluating their own impacts, raise their ambition, and set a target that aligns with 1.5 degrees.
To learn more about Building Transparency’s recent milestones, please read the 2021 Annual Report: buildingtransparency.org/resources.
About Building Transparency
Building Transparency is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization that provides open access data and tools that support broad and swift action across the building industry in addressing embodied carbon’s role in climate change. Formed in 2020, Building Transparency hosts, manages and maintains the Embodied Carbon in Construction Calculator (EC3) tool, which provides thousands of digitized EPDs in a free, open-source database, and Tally, the nonprofit’s Life Cycle Assessment Tool. Building Transparency strives to provide the resources and education necessary to promote adoption of the EC3 tool, including through the official materialsCAN program, and works with global policymakers to shape a better building future.
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Contacts
Kelly Ronna
Trevelino/Keller
kronna@trevelinokeller.com