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Document 52014DC0445
COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT, THE COUNCIL, THE EUROPEAN ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL COMMITTEE AND THE COMMITTEE OF THE REGIONS ON RESOURCE EFFICIENCY OPPORTUNITIES IN THE BUILDING SECTOR
COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT, THE COUNCIL, THE EUROPEAN ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL COMMITTEE AND THE COMMITTEE OF THE REGIONS ON RESOURCE EFFICIENCY OPPORTUNITIES IN THE BUILDING SECTOR
COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT, THE COUNCIL, THE EUROPEAN ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL COMMITTEE AND THE COMMITTEE OF THE REGIONS ON RESOURCE EFFICIENCY OPPORTUNITIES IN THE BUILDING SECTOR
/* COM/2014/0445 final */
COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT, THE COUNCIL, THE EUROPEAN ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL COMMITTEE AND THE COMMITTEE OF THE REGIONS ON RESOURCE EFFICIENCY OPPORTUNITIES IN THE BUILDING SECTOR /* COM/2014/0445 final */
RESOURCE EFFICIENCY OPPORTUNITIES IN THE
BUILDING SECTOR
1. INTRODUCTION
The construction and use
of buildings in the EU account for about half of all our extracted materials[1]
and energy consumption[2]
and about a third of our water consumption[3].
The sector also generates about one third of all waste[4] and is associated with
environmental pressures that arise at different stages of a building's life-cycle
including the manufacturing of construction products, building construction,
use, renovation and the management of building waste. The main objectives of
this initiative are to promote a more efficient use of resources consumed by
new and renovated commercial, residential and public buildings and to reduce
their overall environmental impacts throughout the full life cycle. Resourse use is determined in large part by design decisions and
choices over construction materials. To help bringing resource efficiency
gains, designers, manufacturers, contractors, authorities and users need useable
and reliable information to inform their decision-making. This initiative
addresses this information deficit by proposing a set of clearly defined and
measurable indicators, for the assessment of the environmental performance of
buildings.
2. REDUCING RESOURCE USE IN BUILDINGS
Consumption of resources
and related environmental impacts throughout a building's life cycle can be
reduced by:
Promoting better design that weighs resource use
against the needs and functionality of the building and considers
scenarios for deconstruction;
Better project planning which ensures a greater
use of resource and energy efficient products;
Promoting more resource efficient manufacturing
of construction products by, for example, using recycled materials,
reusing existing materials and using waste as a fuel;
Promoting more resource efficient construction
and renovation by, for example, reducing construction waste and recycling/re-using
materials and products so that less is sent to landfill.
The recycling or
reuse of materials or even whole products is increasingly important as a means
to improve the efficient use of materials and to avoid negative impacts associated
with virgin material. However, the overall balance depends to a large extent on
the existence of an efficient recycling system at local, regional or national
level which presents an attractive and cost-efficient alternative to landfill.
The attractiveness of recycling alternatives is governed by the length of transport
distances to recycling sites, achieving the necessary level of purity of the recycled
materials and recycling and production processes. Energy consumption in the use phase from
heating and lighting is covered by various EU regulations[5][6][7][8]. Energy used in the manufacture
of construction products and the construction process also plays a major role
in the overall environmental impact of a building. Studies show that between 5-10% of total energy consumption across the EU is related to the
production of construction products[9].
In addition, the embodied
greenhouse gas emissions of a building are increasing[10] and can comprise a significant
share of total greenhouse gas emissions. The entire life-cycle of a building
must be considered if the environmental impacts are to be tackled effectively.
Otherwise, impacts may be overlooked or additional problems created in other
parts of the life cycle. For example, some solutions to
improve the energy efficiency of a building in the use phase could make later
recycling more difficult and expensive. Reducing life-cycle
costs Buildings that are designed and constructed to reduce life-cycle
environmental impacts deliver direct economic benefits such as lower
operational and maintenance costs,[11],[12],[13]
slower depreciation and a higher asset value[14],[15].
In addition, there are also positive social impacts like improved health and
productivity. Currently, most certified buildings are high-end
commercial and public buildings (e.g. prestigious hotels and offices) because
of the additional administrative and certification
costs which should rather be seen in the context of the longer-term benefits. As awareness amongst designers, suppliers and manufacturers grows,
costs have fallen as the supply chain adapts to new requirements and practices.
In France, a study by QUALITEL has concluded that the
extra cost for constructing sustainable residential buildings as opposed to
standard ones has gone from 10 % in 2003 to below 1% today[16]. This trend has also been noted in the UK[17]. 3. TOWARDS A
COMMON EUROPEAN APPROACH TO ASSESS THE ENVIRONMENTAL PERFORMANCE OF BUILDINGS Current status The Roadmap to a Resource
Efficient Europe[18]
proposed that buildings should be renovated and constructed with greater
resource efficiency which would require policies looking at a wide range of
environmental impacts across the entire life-cycle. The "Strategy for the
Sustainable Competitiveness of the Construction Sector and its
Enterprises"[19]
reiterated that resource efficiency was among the main challenges that the
sector faces in the period up to 2020. The strategy also indicated that the
Commission "will propose approaches to mutual recognition or harmonisation
of the various existing assessment methods, also with a view to making them
more operational and affordable for construction enterprises, the insurance
industry and investors". While there are several
instruments which have an impact on buildings and construction products such as
the Energy Performance of Buildings Directive[20],
the Energy Efficiency Directive[21],
the Construction Products Regulation[22],
the EU Emissions Trading System[23],
the Industrial Emissions Directive[24],
the Waste Framework Directive[25]
and the Landfill Directive[26],
they focus on different resources and parts of the life-cycle and for the time
being they are not designed to provide an overall life-cycle approach. At national level,
a few Member States are preparing policies linked to life-cycle information. There
is a risk that the indicators they eventually develop will differ, leading to an
unnecessarily complex business environment. On the other hand, the current
interest can be seen as an opportunity to co-ordinate diverging national
approaches, to develop comparable data and to share best practice. Within the
context of the Communication on the “sustainable competitivness of the
construction sector[27]
the Commission has proposed to improve the mutual recognition of environmental
assessment methods to offer additional business opportunities to small and
medium sized enterprises (SMEs) in the construction sector. Also in the private sector,
the environmental performance of buildings is often not assessed to any
significant extent via voluntary commercial multi-criteria certification
schemes. Less than one percent of buildings in Europe are certified via such schemes[28]. Uptake is hampered by
presumed high certification costs and also by the uncertainity as to whether an
assessment scheme will be required by the final client and if so, according to
which specific scheme. The fact that there is no established comparability
between the different schemes also adds to the uncertainty and complexity for
businesses. In summary, there is a
lack of reliable, comparable and affordable data, methods and tools on which
the operators in the supply chain can analyse and benchmark the environmental
performance of different solutions. Meaningful decisions regarding supply chain
risk, market opportunities and internal investment priorities are consequently difficult
to make. Consumers suffer from the absence of adequate
guidance on how to incorporate environmental considerations into their
purchasing decisions and this makes it difficult to develop trust and
confidence in the market. As much as 79% of interviewed Europeans claim that
this would be an important factor in their decision-making, if they were
provided with the information.[29] Steps forward – need
for objective and reliable data To enable professionals, decision
makers and investors throughout the EU to use life-cycle aspects, they need empirical
based, reliable, transparent and comparable data[30], which in turn will
have to be based on clear indicators for building performance which combine the
objectives of different public and private requirements. While different national and commercial schemes may have reasons to diverge
slightly in their approaches (e.g. specific materials or climatic
considerations), a common framework of core indicators, focusing on the
most essential aspects of environmental impacts should nonetheless be established.
This will allow comparability and provide consumers and
policy makers with easier access to reliable and consistent information. A single framework
with core indicators will:
Allow easier
communication of information to professional and non-experts;
Provide reliable and comparable data to
be used in decision-making covering the entire life-cycle of buildings;
Enable the setting of clear objectives
and targets, including system boundaries, for building performance, complementing
already existing European legislation on buildings[31];
Increase awareness of the benefits of
sustainable buildings among actors engaged in providing buildings, as well
as private and public clients, including users of buildings;
Facilitate the
effective transfer of good practices from one country to another;
Reduce the cost
to assess effectively and communicate the environmental performance of
buildings;
Provide public authorities with access to
core indicators and to a critical mass of relevant data on which to base
their policy initiatives, including Green Public Procurement;
·
Widen the market for sustainable buildings to
more countries than current trends indicate and to other buildings sectors such
as non-residential buildings and, eventually, to the residential market. The advantages for building sector professionals (including SMEs) are:
Architects,
designers, manufacturers of construction products, builders, developers
and investors, will be able to benefit from competitive advantages based
on environmental performance;
Manufacturers
of construction products will only have to provide product information
needed for building assessment in one way, resulting in cost savings[32];
Architects and
builders
will be supported via greater information on both product and
building level, with reduced costs when incorporating sustainability
aspects[33];
Developers
will more easily be able to compare performance of projects[34];
Investors, property
owners and insurers will be able to improve the allocation of capital and
to integrate environmental risk into their decisions.
Steps forward – selecting reliable indicators In collaboration with stakeholders, the Commission will develop a framework consisting of core indicators, including their underlying methods, to be used to assess the environmental performance of buildings throughout their life-cycle. Based on existing policies, regulations and data[35] at EU and national level, and without pre-empting the results of future work, this process should as a minimum investigate the following areas[36]: Total energy use, including operational energy[37] (based on existing legislation) and embodied energy of products and construction processes Material use and the embodied environmental impacts[38] Durability of construction products Design for deconstruction Management of construction as well as demolition waste (CDW) Recycled content in construction materials Recyclability and reusability of construction materials and products Water used by buildings[39] The use intensity of (mostly public) buildings (e.g. flexible functionality for different users during different times of the day)[40] Indoor comfort Considering the wide range
of buildings in the EU as well as differences in constructing new builings or
renovating existing ones, the framework will not cover all aspects of the
environmental performance, but comprise the indicators that after the
consultation with stakeholders have been identified as the ones with the
highest environmental impact in the EU. Steps forward –
framework development The framework with core
indicators and their underlying methods will also:
Present guidance concerning its implementation,
in particular requirements for data quality and reliability, encouraging
third party verification;
Include the necessary guidance for the use of
the indicators;
Suggest relevant benchmarks of building performance,
beyond energy efficiency;
Allow for translation of technical indicators
into information useful for the financial community wherever necessary.
The framework has to be
flexible so that it can be integrated in existing and new assessment schemes,
or be used on its own. It should be rigorous enough to drive improvement in
performance and allow for comparison between buildings. The framework with core
indicators, and effective data collection and sharing, will be agreed on in
cooperation with stakeholders and Member States. The process will take about
two years with consultation periods with stakeholders to ensure proper
participation. It will partly be based on existing work, such as the technical
standard EN15978[41]
as well as existing voluntary commercial certification schemes for buildings,
including the work of Sustainable Building Alliance[42]but also on relevant
research projects[43]
and developments at the international level. The intention is to make
the framework free to use in decision-making at different stages, but also to
make use of it in policy-setting at various levels. Therefore, the framework
should allow for:
Being incorporated as a module in assessment
schemes next to their larger sets of indicators; or
Being used on its own, as an affordable solution
initially for non-residential and later on by residential buildings, once
experience has been gained.
4. TOWARDS A BETTER
FUNCTIONING MARKET FOR RECYCLED CONSTRUCTION MATERIALS Within the
framework, special attention will be given to increasing the use of recycled
materials and the reduction of construction and demolition waste (CDW). CDW
makes up a third of total waste generated in the EU[44]. A large majority of CDW
is recyclable but with the exception of a few Member States recycling up to
90%, the average recovery for EU27 is just below 50%[45][46]. Recycling CDW can lead to
significant resource and environmental benefits. For example, metals see an
overall reduction of impacts of more than 90% for aluminium and copper and
about 15% for low-alloyed steel[47].
Concrete is the most used material in buildings and its recycling reduces
natural resource depletion and landfilling of waste. Concrete can often be
recycled at demolition or construction sites close to urban areas where it will
be reused thereby reducing transport demand with savings in cost and related
emissions[48].
Recycling enables savings for
other materials as well. For flat glass (used for windows etc), one tonne of recycled
material results in savings of 1200 kg of virgin material, 25% of energy and
300 kg of CO2 emissions (directly linked to the melting process)[49].
There are similar savings in terms of energy and CO2 emissions for
recycled glass wool[50].
For stone wool, the gains may be in the order of 5% with regard to energy
consumption and related emissions[51].
As for gypsum, life-cycle assessments have shown typical reductions in global
warming potential, human toxicity and eutrophication of about 4-5% when
producing a board with 25% recycled content as opposed to only using virgin
material[52].
Apart from environmental
benefits, there can be economic opportunities for manufacturers when using recycled
material. As an example, the flat glass industry in the EU sees a market price for
recycled glass of about 60-80 EUR/tonne, sufficiently below the 90 EUR/tonne
necessary to compete with virgin material. In the case of glass, there is thus often
an economic benefit for manufacturers to use recycled material. Still, market
demand for recycled material is rarely met. Recycling material results
in job growth in deconstruction, sorting and recycling of construction
materials. This is typically local work and would create job opportunities
throughout Europe. Despite the potential for significant economic and environmental benefits
of recycling of CDW, large parts are still landfilled or backfilled (filling of
voids after construction or excavation activities). Currently, it is mainly
metals that are recycled due to their high value and existing markets. Recycling of many other
parts of CDW often faces barriers related to two distinct market failures: the
environmental damage cost is neither internalised in the landfill fees nor in
the cost of virgin materials, which can result in recycled material being more
costly than virgin material; and the split incentives in the CDW value chain
where the cost of dismantling, separation and processing the waste is mostly born
at the phase of demolition while the potential benefits from using the recycled
materials generally accrue at the production phase. These market failures,
together with gaps in the waste management infrastructure in a large number of
Member States prevent investment in deconstruction and separation operations,
and landfilling or backfilling remain preferred alternatives. Demolition
companies thus face uncertainty regarding demand even if the price of recycled
materials could guarantee profits for the manufacturer. Markets do not develop economies
of scale and the amount of recycled materials supplied does not correspond to
the potential demand from construction products companies. In some cases,
technologies enabling recycled materials that meet all the technical, safety
and environmental requirements for construction products are still lacking. Moreover, the adequate certification procedures attesting that
recycled material meet all necessary requirements are sometimes
missing. The Commission will
investigate how these systemic barriers can be overcome. While the revision of
different parts of European waste legislation is aimed at further simplifying
the waste Acquis and to ensure coherence between different pieces of
waste legislation, the present Communication instead explores policy measures
to stimulate creation of markets with recycled materials derived from CDW. The
revision of waste legislation and the actions presented here are thus complementary
as a successful creation of markets for recycled material will naturally strongly
support the implementation of the different parts of waste legislation. This
can play an important role, also considering the fact that the European
Commission plans to assess the feasibility of further restricting landfill of
CDW. In relation to this, best
practices show that some Member States have succeeded in diverting CDW from
landfilling and backfilling and have increased recycling. Targeted policies
that combine market based and regulatory measures bring about especially
visible benefits[53]. 5. SUMMARY CONCLUSION While the interest in
improving resource efficiency in the construction sector is growing at national and at EU level,
different national public and private approaches are increasing the complexity of
the working environment for all stakeholders. The lack of common objectives,
indicators and data, and the lack of mutual recognition of different approaches
could soon undo progress made to date and lead to distortions in the internal
market for professionals in the field of planning, designing, constructing and
manufacturing. Therefore, the Commission will invite stakeholders (in particular: public authorities, social partners, investors, insurers, architects, contractors, demolition operators, manufacturers, recyclers and providers of assessment schemes) to: Discuss objectives and indicators for assessing the sustainability of buildings (2014-2015); Discuss the practical implementation of a framework containing core indicators (2014-2015); Contribute to the development of this framework (2015-2016). In addition, the Commission will: Promote the exchange of best practice and will collaborate with Member States on measures that: divert CDW from landfilling and backfilling, either through increased charges or regulatory measures; as appropriate, integrate external environmental cost in the price of virgin materials for construction products in order to stimulate increased use of secondary raw materials. Explore options for measures to ensure that recycled materials meet necessary quality and safety requirements, through standardisation and certification; Explore how benchmarks for content of recycled materials in construction products and buildings can stimulate demand for recycled materials. The initial focus will be on priority materials (such as concrete with its high volume and thermal insulation with its energy intensive production) with gradual expansion to all recyclable CDW. Benchmarks and targets can be promoted i.a. for use in Green Public Procurement and in environmental management schemes in the construction sector; Study specific waste streams of CDW to identify opportunities for the valorization of CDW; Develop specific tools/guidelines for assessment of buildings prior to demolition and renovation with a view to optimal use of CDW. As complementary actions, the Commission will support: Research and innovation in the area of recycling and production of construction materials from CDW via Horizon 2020. Demonstration projects via instruments such as Horizon 2020, COSME, LIFE+ and Structural Funds that showcase how collaboration between public authorities and the private sector can create viable markets with recycled materials. The Commission will therefore support projects in areas such as: design for deconstruction; recyclability audits of buildings designated for demolition or reconstruction; development of on-site CDW separation techniques and practices; development of technologies for processing CDW into high quality recycled materials; incentivising producers of construction products to use recycled material; development of collaborative schemes between demolition and construction product sectors, to share cost and benefits of CDW recycling. [1] COM (2011) 571 [2] COM (2007) 860 [3] COM (2007) 414 [4] Study on "Management of CDW in the EU": http://ec.europa.eu/environment/waste/pdf/2011_CDW_Report.pdf [5] 2010/31/EU [6] 2012/27/EU [7] 2009/125/EC [8] 2010/30/EU [9] "Resource efficiency in the building
sector", Ecorys and Copenhagen Resource Institute, Rotterdam May 2014 (http://ec.europa.eu/environment/eussd/pdf/Resource
efficiency in the building sector.pdf) AND "Energy use and
environmental impacts of the Swedish building and real estate management sector",
Toller, S. et al, Journal of Industrial Ecology, 2011, Vol. 15, Nr 3 [10] "HQE Performance, Premières tendencies pour les
bâtiments neufs (Association HQE 2011) ISBN 978954110107" AND Swedish
study referred to above. [11] Smart Market Report, (2013) http://www.worldgbc.org/files/8613/6295/6420/World_Green_Building_Trends_SmartMarket_Report_2013.pdf
[12] Parker, J. (2012) The Value of BREEAM, A BSRIA report [13] The business case for green
buildings, (2013), http://www.worldgbc.org/activities/business-case/
[14] From obsolescence to resilience -
2013, Jones Lang LaSalle, , www.joneslanglasalle.co.uk [15] www.rehva.eu/publications-and-resources/hvac-journal/2013/012013/energy-efficiency-strategy-at-the-portfolio-of-a-property-owner/ [16] Ana Cunha Cribellier, Responsable du Développement
International, QUALITEL – CERQUAL [17] Future of sustainable housing, KN5211 BRE May 2013 [18] COM (2011) 571 [19] COM (2012) 433 [20] 2010/31/EU, also, there is currently a voluntary common
EU certification scheme for the energy performance of
non-residential buildings under development, in line with the article 11 (9) of
this directive [21] 2012/27/EU [22] Regulation 305/2011/EU [23] 2003/87/EC [24] 2010/75/EU [25] 2008/98/EC [26] 1999/31/EC [27] COM (2012) 433 [28] "Resource efficiency in the building sector",
Ecorys and Copenhagen Resource Institute, Rotterdam May 2014 (http://ec.europa.eu/environment/eussd/pdf/Resource
efficiency in the building sector.pdf) [29] Flash Eurobarometer 367 - TNS
Political & Social (July 2013) [30] Commission Recommendation 2013/179/EU on the use of
common methods to measure and communicate the life cycle environmental
performance of products and organisations [31] In addition, also to support the future development of
Sustainable cities criteria as described in the 7th Environment
Action Programme, http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=OJ:L:2013:354:0171:0200:EN:PDF [32] This often needs to be done in different formats, with
a significant cost for manufacturers. This has been confirmed by Construction
Products Europe, Glass for Europe and Eurima. See also Pacheco-Torgal F. et
al., Eco-efficient construction and building materials, Woodhead Publishing
Ltd, 2013, ISBN 0857097679 [33] This is expected to be further
supported by building information modelling tools, guiding the design by
calculating function and performance of a building depending on design,
material choice etc. These tools take environmental aspects into account to a very
limited extent. It is expected that such aspects would be part of the
continuous development of these tools if the uncertainty regarding how to
assess and report environmental performance was removed. [34] Developers work with different commercial certification
schemes due to varying client demand. [35] Waste Data Centre (http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/portal/page/portal/waste/introduction);
Natural Resources Data Centre (http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/portal/page/portal/data_centre_natural_resources/introduction); Resource Efficiency Scoreboard (http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/portal/page/portal/europe_2020_indicators/ree_scoreboard); European
Platform on Life Cycle Assessment (http://eplca.jrc.ec.europa.eu/) [36] The Public Consultation organised in relation to this
initiative concluded on the listed areas. Indoor comfort was not included in
the consultation but has been emphasised by stakeholders. [37] While the use phase depends on design and construction
as well as on the behaviour of the occupants, the latter is not the focus of
this initiative. [38] When appropriate, also taking into account the use of
green infrastructure elements such as green roofs and green walls, COM(2013)249,
http://ec.europa.eu/environment/nature/ecosystems/index_en.htm [39] See footnote on energy use above. [40] In order to adapt the need for further built
environment (e.g., use empty instead of new buildings, use buildings for more
than one purpose, build buildings to be adapted to new functions or changing
needs) [41] http://www.en-standard.eu/csn-en-15978-sustainability-of-construction-works-assessment-of-environmental-performance-of-buildings-calculation-method/
[42] http://sballiance.org/
[43] Such as FP7 projects SuPerBuildings (http://cic.vtt.fi/superbuildings/)
and OPEN HOUSE (http://www.openhouse-fp7.eu/about_project/related_projects) [44] Study on "Management of CDW in the EU": http://ec.europa.eu/environment/waste/pdf/2011_CDW_Report.pdf [45] Implementing EU waste legislation for green growth, DG
ENV (2011) [46] Management of CDW in the EU http://ec.europa.eu/environment/waste/pdf/2011_CDW_Report.pdf
[47] OVAM Ecolizer 2.0 Ecodesign Tool http://www.ecodesignlink.be/images/filelib/EcolizerEN_1180.pdf [48] The Cement Sustainability Initiative, World Business
Council for Sustainable Development, ISBN 987-3-940388-49-0 [49] Glass for Europe, http://www.glassforeurope.com/images/cont/187_987_file.pdf [50] EURIMA [51] EURIMA [52] WRAP Technical report, Life cycle assessment of
plasterboard, April 2008, 1-84405-378-4 [53] Del Rio Merino, M., Gracia, P. I., Azevedo, I. S. W.
(2010) Sustainable construction: CDW reconsidered. Waste
Management and Research. 28: 118-129. DOI: 10.1177/0734242X09103841 and UK case (p.170) http://ec.europa.eu/environment/enveco/taxation/pdf/annexes_phasing_out_env_harmful_subsidies.pdf