Subscribe to Newsletter
  • ACQUIRE

logo

  • Energy
  • Construction
  • Resources
  • Trending
  • Business Insight
  • Events
  • Magazine
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Home
  • Home
  • Energy
  • Construction
  • Resources
  • Trending
  • Business Insight
  • Events
  • Magazine
  • Advertise
  • Contact

New climate tracker finds EU building decarbonisation is off track

29 Jun, 2022
climate tracker



The newly developed EU Buildings Climate Tracker finds that the EU is facing a growing gap in advancing towards climate neutrality in the building sector.

In 2020, the Buildings Performance Institute Europe (BPIE) developed a tracker to monitor global climate change action in the buildings and construction sector for the Global Alliance for Buildings and Construction.

Based on this work, BPIE has developed a similar tracker for the EU: a high-level index showcasing the progress of the EU building stock towards full decarbonisation by 2050. To keep close track of the evolution of the building stock in the EU, the index monitors progress yearly and will be updated regularly.

The Tracker index serves as a relevant benchmark and assessment tool for climate neutrality progress of the building stock in the EU. This first edition provides evidence for the urgent need for additional action that should be reflected in a transformational outcome of legislative discussions on the Energy performance of buildings directive (EPBD).

The results show that the buildings sector is not on track to achieve climate neutrality in 2050. In 2019, the index has a calculated value of 0.48 on a scale between 0 (reference situation in 2015) and 100 (climate neutrality in 2050), while it should be at 14 points. The Tracker also indicates that building decarbonisation is far from progressing at the speed needed. The achieved progress between 2015 and 2019 was a 0.12 point annual improvement, while it should have been at 3.6 points.

This means that building decarbonisation is off track and much behind the path to climate neutrality by 2050. While the index should have been at 14 points in 2019, it is barely above 0, thus at almost the same level in 2019 as in 2015. Put differently, four years of potential progress towards climate neutrality by 2050 have been lost.

To catch up, the annual rate of improvement as of 2019 until 2030, must now be at 5 points per year.

Besides a tracked progress of building decarbonisation in Europe, this briefing outlines a few recommendations to be considered for the EPBD revision:

  • Deep renovation should be the default approach to EPBD measures and be prioritised and integrated into the design of financing programs
  • Minimum Energy Performance Standards should be applied to the whole building stock, in order to bring buildings up to a higher level of energy performance than in the Commission proposal, and to outline a path with clearly indicated milestones between 2030 and 2050 for the entire stock to be Zero Emission Buildings (ZEB) by 2050
  • ZEB standards for all new buildings should be applicable as of 2025, with no fossil fuel heating allowed
  • Subsidies to fossil fuel heating systems should be stopped as soon as possible and funding streams should be re-directed towards the installation of renewable based equipment, in line with a coherent and comprehensive renovation roadmap
  • Fossil fuel systems in existing buildings should be phased out by 2035 at the latest
  • Solar rooftop obligations stemming from the REPowerEU plan should be combined with attic and roof insulation
  • Industrial type renovation projects, as well as advisory services such as one-stop-shops and Renovation Passports to achieve deep renovations, should be boosted by using available money from the Recovery & Resilience Facility, cohesion funding, and ETS revenues

Share this story

  • Share on LinkedIn
  • Share on Twitter
  • Share on Facebook

Related Articles

Raw Materials Summit

Connecting Green Hydrogen Europe 2024

Australian Building Sustainability Association (ABSA)

Vista Concepts

Vista Concepts

Comments

Leave a comment Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Breaking

  • Energy
  • Construction
  • Resources
22 Jan

CEFC invests AU$70 million in infrastructure fund to boost energy transition

22 Jan

UNSW engineers set world record for solar cell material

16 Jan

Fortescue begins construction on first wind project

14 Jan

Solar and wind farms spill power amid oversupply

14 Jan

Neoen advances 500 MW Wheatbelt wind project

19 Jan

WA unveils landmark Urban Greening Strategy

15 Jan

Cement kilns safely transform unrecyclable global waste

14 Jan

2025 marked peak Green Star sustainability in Australian buildings

19 Dec

RICS report shows AI could boost green infrastructure

17 Dec

CEFC urges investors to lead green data centres growth

22 Jan

Rio Tinto adds new solar plant at Kennecott operations

20 Jan

Monash scientists develop greener battery recycling

16 Jan

Rio Tinto to supply Amazon with low-carbon copper for AI data centres

16 Jan

Prometheus reveals breakthrough process for synthetic kerosene   

14 Jan

‘Breathing batteries’ store energy and carbon

Online Magazine

    Current Cover
  • Login
  • Subscribe

Subscribe

Subscribe to Newsletter

Our Titles

  • Share on Newsletter
  • Share on LinkedIn
  • Share on Twitter
  • Share on Facebook
  • Home
  • Contact Us
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy
© Sage Media Group 2026 All Rights Reserved.
×
Authorization
  • Registration
 This feature has been disabled
 This feature has been disabled until further notice, however you may still register
×
Registration
  • Autorization
Register
* All fields required