Making every building count in meeting Australia’s emission targets
Buildings in Australia account for over 50% of electricity use and almost a quarter of our carbon emissions but the failures, frailties and fragmentation of the construction sector have created a major obstacle to long-term reductions. Reducing our carbon footprint plays second fiddle to the multibillion-dollar work of replacing flammable cladding, asbestos and other non-compliant materials and ensuring buildings are structurally sound and can be safely occupied.
Buildings – whether residential, commercial or institutional – do not score well under the nation’s main emissions reduction program, the A$3.5 billion Climate Solutions Package. This is intended to help meet Australia’s 2030 Paris Agreement commitment to cut emissions by 26–28% from 2005 levels.
Read more: http://theconversation.com/making-every-building-count-in-meeting-australias-emission-targets-126930
![Image result for Making every building count in meeting](https://scx1.b-cdn.net/csz/news/800/2019/makingeveryb.jpg)
Buildings – whether residential, commercial or institutional – do not score well under the nation’s main emissions reduction program, the A$3.5 billion Climate Solutions Package. This is intended to help meet Australia’s 2030 Paris Agreement commitment to cut emissions by 26–28% from 2005 levels.
Read more: http://theconversation.com/making-every-building-count-in-meeting-australias-emission-targets-126930
![Image result for Making every building count in meeting](https://scx1.b-cdn.net/csz/news/800/2019/makingeveryb.jpg)
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