零排放资源库:符合2050年在英国实现零排放的现实观点的建筑材料

Charlotte Taylor, Julian M. Allwood, Takuma Watari, Will Hawkins
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引用次数: 0

摘要

建筑行业面临着一项艰巨的任务,即通过“零排放资源库”来满足日益增长的建筑需求,这些材料与不久的将来的零排放经济相适应。该行业的大多数脱碳路线图和情景分析严重依赖于尚未大规模部署的碳储存等高风险技术,或者倾向于回收利用,而忽视了零排放电力供应有限可能带来的限制。因此,本文对英国建筑材料供应方案进行了首次批判性审查,并对碳储存、零排放电力和零排放运输的可用性提出了现实期望。本文重点介绍了九种关键的建筑材料——混凝土、钢、铝、结构玻璃、木材、土、石、石灰和稻草。我们得出的结论是,零排放资源池包括原生生物基材料,受生产性土地、原生土壤和石材的可用性限制,受当地地质和交通的限制,再生材料,受废料和无排放电力的可用性限制,以及再利用组件,受可用性和翻新潜力的限制。这表明需要修订国家建筑战略和在减少材料预算的情况下提供建筑服务的一系列企业机会。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The zero-emissions resource pool: construction materials compatible with a realistic view of delivering zero-emissions in the UK by 2050

The construction sector faces the daunting task of meeting growing construction demand with a 'zero-emission resource pool'—materials that are compatible with a near-future zero-emissions economy. Most decarbonisation roadmaps and scenario analyses for the sector depend heavily on high-risk technologies such as carbon storage that have not yet been deployed at significant scale, or favour recycling whilst overlooking likely constraints from limited supplies of zero-emissions electricity. This paper therefore provides a first critical review of options to supply construction materials in the UK with realistic expectations about the availability of carbon storage, zero-emissions electricity and zero-emissions transport. The paper focuses on nine key construction materials—concrete, steel, aluminium, structural glass, timber, earth, stone, lime and straw. We conclude that the zero-emissions resource pool includes virgin bio-based materials, limited by the availability of productive land, virgin earth and stone, limited by local geology and transportation, recycled materials, limited by the availability of scrap and emission-free electricity, and reused components, limited by availability and refurbishment potential. This points to the need for a revision to the national construction strategy and a range of entrepreneurial opportunities in delivering the services of construction within a reduced material budget.

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