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Embodied Carbon Initiative

What Is Embodied Carbon?

Embodied carbon is the sum of all greenhouse gas emissions released during the lifecycle of materials, including extraction, manufacturing, transport, construction, and disposal. Embodied carbon emissions from buildings account for 11 percent of annual climate-warming GHG emissions globally.

Construction workers standing together on construction site

Why It Matters:

Most of a building’s lifetime GHG emissions occur before anyone occupies it. Understanding the embodied carbon of building materials is crucial for designing and constructing buildings with materials that don’t cancel out the climate gains made by operational efficiency improvements in recent decades. We can ensure every building is part of the climate solution through circular and efficient design, improved material manufacturing and reuse, and policies that create market demand for low-embodied carbon and carbon-storing concrete, steel, insulation, and other materials.

What We’re Doing:

RMI’s Embodied Carbon Initiative has played an instrumental role in guiding the building industry and government agencies on measuring and reducing embodied carbon emissions in line with global climate targets. We are changing how builders build, increasing corporate investment in embodied carbon, and enacting policies to create greater transparency, demand, and adoption of high-performance materials that are cost-effective, abundant, and good for the climate.

RESOURCES

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Resources

The Hidden Climate Impact of Residential Construction

Report

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Transforming Existing Buildings from Climate Liabilities to Climate Assets

Report

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Embodied Carbon Cities Policy Toolkit

Toolkit

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Roadmap to Reaching Zero Embodied Carbon in Federal Building Projects

Report

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New White House ‘Buy Clean’ Guidance Targets Huge Emissions Hidden in Building Materials

Article

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Policy Opportunities to Increase Material Circularity in the Buildings Industry

Article

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The Building Industry Takes Aim at “This Whole Other Chunk” of Emissions

Article

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Low-Carbon Concrete in the Northeastern United States

Procurement Brief

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Low-Cost, High-Value Opportunities to Reduce Embodied Carbon in Buildings

Blog

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Giving America’s Infrastructure a Clean Start

Blog

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Reducing Embodied Carbon in Buildings

Report

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