The UK government set itself a 60 per cent reduction of carbon dioxide emissions target on 2000 levels by 2050.
This commitment will require carbon reductions to be made by all industries including the housing sector which
presently accounts for 27 per cent of carbon dioxide emissions. The house building industry is the subject of
numerous government policies and legislation, but none are as demanding as the Code of Sustainable Homes,
which set a ‘world-beating’ target for all new homes to be zero carbon by 2016. This paper sets out to
investigate the feasibility of building zero carbon homes in England by 2016 from a house builder’s perspective.
A comprehensive opinion of the feasibility of zero carbon homes is gathered through a questionnaire survey and
in-depth semi-structured interviews with the major UK housing developers. The research found that there are
currently numerous legislative, cultural, financial and technical barriers facing house builders to deliver zero
carbon homes in England by 2016..The surveyed house builders concurred that these challenges are not
insurmountable provided that a swift, all-embracing and above all realistic strategy is adopted and implemented
across the supply chain.
History
School
Architecture, Building and Civil Engineering
Citation
OSMANI, M. and O'REILLY, A., 2009. Feasibility of zero carbon homes in England by 2016: a house builder's perspective. Building and Environment, 44 (9), pp. 1917-1924