Land availability in Europe for a radical shift toward bio-based construction
2021; Elsevier BV; Volume: 70; Linguagem: Inglês
10.1016/j.scs.2021.102929
ISSN2210-6715
AutoresVerena Göswein, Jana Reichmann, Guillaume Habert, Francesco Pittau,
Tópico(s)Land Use and Ecosystem Services
ResumoThe renovation and construction of buildings presents an opportunity for climate change mitigation in urban environments. Bio-based construction is particularly promising since the plant's sequestered carbon offsets the building's carbon emissions. However, the required land to cultivate suitable biomass and the feasibility of environmentally sustainable materials for resilient cities should be understood. This study analyzes timber, straw, hemp and cork construction and renovation in Europe. A prediction-based model, tuned-up on four systems (built environment, natural environment, carbon balance, industrial processing), converts construction activities until 2050 into required material, embodied land and carbon storage. A novel material-land nexus concept analyzes the required land for bio-based construction. Land transformation is not analyzed. The aim is to evaluate the biomass supply considering the current cross-sectoral use of land in Europe. The results indicate that current forests and wheat plantations are more than sufficient for supplying construction materials. Straw seems better than timber, in terms of resource availability and carbon storage potential. Cork is only favorable locally in southern dry countries. The current legal limitations hinder hemp's potential at a large scale. A wider application of bio-based materials remains unrealistic until an appropriate legal framework is provided.
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