BSRIA comments on IPCC Climate Change reportOctober 2018

Colin Goodwin Technical Director

BSRIA has commented on today’s announcement by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) which has issued a “dramatic report” on the impact of global warming of keeping the rise under 1.5C.

At a meeting in South Korea, after three years of research and a week of haggling between scientists and government officials, it states that the world is now completely “off track”, heading instead towards 3C.

“The most extensive warning yet on the risks of rising global temperatures” was given: staying below 1.5C will require "rapid, far-reaching and unprecedented changes in all aspects of society". It will be hugely expensive but the “window of opportunity” is not yet shut.

The report states that limiting warming to 1.5C brings a lot of benefits compared with limiting it to 2C. Coupled with the unprecedented nature of the changes that are required if society is to limit warming to 1.5C – changes to energy systems, land management and infrastructure is needed.

This new study says that going past 1.5C is “dicing with the planet's liveability”. The 1.5C temperature "guard rail" could be exceeded in just 12 years in 2030.

Five steps to 1.5C:

  • Global emissions of CO2 need to decline by 45 per cent from 2010 levels by 2030.
  • Renewables are estimated to provide up to 85 per cent of global electricity by 2050.
  • Coal is expected to reduce to close to zero.
  • Up to seven million sq km of land will be needed for energy crops (a bit less than the size of Australia).
  • Global net zero emissions by 2050.

Colin Goodwin, Technical Director, BSRIA, said:

“It is clear that unprecedented changes are needed to curb this catastrophic rise in global warming.
In recent years, the UK government expanded offshore wind power and had become the first developed country to set an end date for the use of coal. There are still clearly huge changes and challenges ahead in the expected energy transition away from fossil fuels.

As an industry, we collectively need to, not only take action on climate change and stabilize the climate to avoid its worst impacts, but get on track to meet the UK’s climate change obligations. The UK's net carbon emissions should be reduced by 60 per cent by 2030 – and to zero by 2050 or at least 80 per cent of 1990 levels by 2050.

But there has been mounting scepticism about the UK’s own commitment to standing behind these words, as a result of a series of political policy u-turns on climate change – most of them in the built environment.

The Paris Agreement climate deal agreed by the world's leaders in 2015 put the world on a sustainable low-carbon path. Governments must turn global ambition into national reality and industry will want to see domestic policies that demonstrate commitment to this goal.

Future technology in renewables and the move to reduce greenhouse gases and carbon usage in the built environment is crucial. BSRIA is committed to supporting the UK government in reducing carbon and, indeed, its position on this. Is now the time to call on government for legislation to go further? Or offer incentives for green and clean technologies?

Global warming is a real problem. As an industry we have the skills, technology and the desire to make a difference.”

http://www.ipcc climate report

Embodied Carbon - the Inventory of Carbon and Energy (ICE) (BG 10/2011)
Embodied Carbon - the Inventory of Carbon and Energy (ICE) (BG 10/2011)
The Innovation and Growth Team (IGT), drawn from the construction industry, recently provided a report to the government recommending embodied carbon appraisal. The BSRIA guide produced in conjunction with the University of Bath, in line with the recent IGT report, looks at why...