Carbon Mitigation in the Operation of Chinese Residential Buildings: An Empirical Analysis at the Provincial Scale
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- How have the operational carbon emissions changed at the provincial scale in recent years?
- What are the characteristics, similarities, and differences of China’s national and provincial carbon emission intensity?
- How can the operation of residential buildings be decarbonized in response to the carbon neutrality goal?
2. Literature Review
- To make the first attempt to assess carbon mitigation in the operation of residential buildings in 30 provinces of China at the provincial scale. By obtaining the latest data on total energy consumption, total carbon emission, total building area, and household sizes of residential buildings, the changes in provincial carbon intensity are measured. The carbon intensity is decomposed and analyzed to identify six drivers and quantify the contributions of various drivers to the carbon mitigation of residential buildings
- To establish a provincial carbon mitigation assessment framework. Based on carbon mitigation intensity, total carbon mitigations, and the carbon mitigation efficiency of residential building operations, this study establishes an assessment framework for carbon mitigation at the provincial scale for the first time. Regions were identified according to the geographical locations of different provinces, and the effects of provincial carbon mitigation are assessed at different scales. The provincial carbon emission mitigation results are analyzed and compared with the national assessment results based on carbon intensity changes and annual carbon mitigation changes. In addition, this study reviews the carbon mitigation strategies of Chinese residential buildings, proposes measures to promote carbon mitigation in residential buildings, and provides theoretical references for provincial carbon mitigation efforts.
3. Methods and Materials
3.1. Residential Building Emission Characterization
3.2. Assessment of Historical Carbon Mitigations
3.3. Dataset
4. Results
4.1. Changes of the Operational Carbon Intensity of Residential Building
4.2. Carbon Mitigations of Residential Buildings
5. Discussion
5.1. Differences of Carbon Mitigation Intensity at National and Provincial Scales
5.2. Difference of Annual Carbon Mitigation at the National and Provincial Scales
5.3. Carbon Mitigation Strategies for Residential Buildings
5.3.1. Carry Out Construction Emission Reduction according to Local Conditions and Strengthen Collaborative Governance among Provinces
5.3.2. Increase Investment in Research and Development and Promote Higher Quality Economic Development
5.3.3. Strengthen the Technical Capacity of Building Energy Efficiency and Carbon Mitigation and Improve the Utilization Efficiency of Energy in Buildings
5.3.4. Continuously Optimize the Energy Consumption Structure of Buildings and Increase the Proportion of Clean Energy
6. Conclusions
6.1. Main Findings
- The carbon intensity of provincial residential building operations continued to rise but the growth rate gradually slowed from 2000 to 2018, and the operating carbon intensity increased by an average of 4.2% per year at the provincial scale. Twenty provinces experienced a lower growth rate during the period 2009–2018 compared with 2000–2009, and eight of them (mainly economically developed provinces) showed negative growth in 2009–2018. Household income per capita was identified as the largest contributor to the operational carbon intensity of residential buildings, followed by the housing price to income ratio, and the household housing purchase index was considered to be the largest negative contributor.
- From 2001 to 2018, North China had the highest carbon mitigation intensity and total carbon mitigations, with average values of 602.7 kgCO2/household and 5.8 MtCO2, respectively. From the perspective of carbon mitigation intensity, carbon mitigations and carbon mitigation efficiency of the operational residential buildings, there were obvious regional differences among the provinces. In addition, the significance of carbon mitigation in residential buildings was identified, with the highest carbon mitigation rate shown at 23.5%.
- In most cases, the total carbon mitigations of the operational residential buildings evaluated at the provincial scale was larger than that observed at the national scale, reaching a peak of 233.2 MtCO2 in 2018. Although the impact of the drivers was observed to be consistent at both national and provincial scales, in terms of annual carbon mitigations, the values evaluated at the provincial scale were larger than at the national scale in most cases, with an average discrepancy of 14.4 MtCO2. To improve the level of energy efficiency, decision-makers should formulate regional carbon mitigation plans and policies according to local conditions, which should include building an energy monitoring platform, strengthening the technical capacity of energy efficiency and carbon mitigation, and continuously optimizing the structure of building energy consumption.
6.2. Upcoming Studies
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Region a | Provinces Included (Abbreviations b) |
---|---|
North China | Beijing (BJ, 6), Tianjin (TJ, 7), Hebei (HE, 9), Shanxi (SX, 11) and Inner Mongolia (NM, 4) |
Northeast China | Liaoning (LN, 3), Jilin (JL, 2) and Heilongjiang (HLJ, 1) |
East China | Shanghai (SH, 16), Jiangsu (JS, 22), Zhejiang (ZJ, 19), Anhui (AH, 23), Fujian (FJ, 17), Jiangxi (JX, 25) and Shandong (SD, 14) |
Central China | Henan (HA, 15), Hubei (HB, 18) and Hunan (HN, 21) |
South China | Guangdong (GD, 26), Guangxi (GX, 28) and Hainan (HI, 27) |
Southwest China | Chongqing (CQ, 20), Sichuan (SC, 24), Guizhou (GZ, 29) and Yunnan (YN, 30) |
Northwest China | Shaanxi (SN, 12), Gansu (GS, 13), Qinghai (QH, 5), Ningxia (NX, 8) and Xinjiang (XJ, 10) |
Appendix B
Year | Name | Code a,b | Main Contents or Significance |
---|---|---|---|
2001 | Design standard for energy efficiency of residential buildings in hot summer and cold winter areas | JGJ134—2001, J116-2001 | Energy-saving measures are put forward from the perspectives of architecture, thermal engineering and HVAC design. |
2003 | Design standard for energy efficiency of residential buildings in hot summer and warm winter areas | JGJ75-2003 | Implemented in large and medium-sized cities in 2003, small cities in 2005, and counties in 2007. |
2010 | Design standard for energy efficiency of residential buildings in severe cold and cold areas | JGJ26-2010 | The first standard covers the energy-saving design standards for residential buildings in severe cold and cold areas. |
2010 | Design standard for energy efficiency of residential buildings in hot summer and cold winter areas | JGJ134-2010 | Raise the energy conservation and emission reduction target to 50% in hot summer and cold winter areas. |
2012 | Design standard for energy efficiency of residential buildings in hot summer and warm winter areas | JGJ75-2012 | Raise the energy conservation and emission reduction target to 65% in hot summer and warm winter areas. |
2016 | Design standard for energy efficiency of residential buildings in hot summer and cold winter areas | JGJ134 | Raise the energy conservation and emission reduction target to 65% in hot summer and cold winter areas. |
2018 | Design standard for energy efficiency of residential buildings in severe cold and cold areas | JGJ26-2018 | Raise the energy conservation and emission reduction target to 75% in severe cold and cold areas. |
2019 | Design standard for energy efficiency of residential buildings in mild areas | JGJ475-2019 | The first standard covers the energy-saving design standards for residential buildings in mild areas. |
2019 | Technical standard for near zero energy consumption buildings | GB/T51350-2019 | The first standard covers the energy-saving design standards for zero-energy buildings. |
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Variables | Symbol | Unit | Expression |
---|---|---|---|
Carbon emissions | Mega tons of carbon dioxide (MtCO2) | - | |
Energy consumption | Mega tons of standard coal equivalent (Mtce) | - | |
Gross floor space | Million square meters (m2) | - | |
Household size | Household | - | |
Total income | Billion Chinese yuan (CNY) | - | |
Population | P | Million persons | - |
Housing price | CNY/m2 | - | |
Average household size | Person/household | ||
Housing price to income ratio | r | - | |
Income per capita | CNY/person | ||
Housing purchasing power | m2/CNY | ||
Energy intensity | kgce/m2 | ||
Emission factor | kgCO2/kgce |
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Chen, M.; Lei, J.; Xiang, X.; Ma, M. Carbon Mitigation in the Operation of Chinese Residential Buildings: An Empirical Analysis at the Provincial Scale. Buildings 2022, 12, 1128. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings12081128
Chen M, Lei J, Xiang X, Ma M. Carbon Mitigation in the Operation of Chinese Residential Buildings: An Empirical Analysis at the Provincial Scale. Buildings. 2022; 12(8):1128. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings12081128
Chicago/Turabian StyleChen, Minxia, Jifeng Lei, Xiwang Xiang, and Minda Ma. 2022. "Carbon Mitigation in the Operation of Chinese Residential Buildings: An Empirical Analysis at the Provincial Scale" Buildings 12, no. 8: 1128. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings12081128
APA StyleChen, M., Lei, J., Xiang, X., & Ma, M. (2022). Carbon Mitigation in the Operation of Chinese Residential Buildings: An Empirical Analysis at the Provincial Scale. Buildings, 12(8), 1128. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings12081128