McKinsey Launches Net Zero Built Environment Council

to Cut Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Buildings

McKinsey has announced the launch of a Net Zero Built Environment Council, a cross-sector coalition of industry stakeholders to collaboratively create new pathways to cut greenhouse gas emissions from buildings.

The life cycle of buildings is responsible for approximately 40 percent of global CO₂ emissions, making the built environment among the highest GHG emitters, above electricity production, shipping, and aviation. The new Council will bring together stakeholders across the built environment value chain, from industry leaders to scale-ups, to stimulate investment, deployment, and scaling of new materials and technologies that will help reduce emissions at all stages of the building life cycle.

The launch of the Council will support stakeholders to create and commercialize new green innovations, create global sustainability metrics and research, and promote cost-effective pathways to decarbonizing everything from construction methods to materials. It aims to align siloed supply chains, construction projects and markets, and help industry players to tap into an estimated US$800 billion – US$1,900 billion in potential green markets.

The launch of the Net Zero Built Environment Council comes alongside the release of a new McKinsey report that identifies a lack of collaboration within the built environment ecosystem as a key obstacle to decarbonization. McKinsey’s research finds that 76% of emissions from an average building are caused by operations, demonstrating a need for collaborative decarbonization across the entire built environment life cycle, not just during construction. The report found that half of all emissions across the built environment could be eliminated with little extra cost, while 20 percent will be more costly and complex to decarbonize, such as cement and steel, requiring more industry partnerships to reduce costs and risks for all new materials and technologies.

Brodie Boland, partner at McKinsey, said: “Reducing lifecycle emissions will require collaborations and partnerships across industries to cost-efficiently build and scale new innovations from green cement to hydrogen boilers. Yet the built environment is currently a fragmented landscape of separate localized markets, suppliers and building codes as well as disjointed construction processes with unequal accountability. With net zero requiring a threefold increase in the pace of decarbonization, the new Council aims to unite all key players to accelerate decarbonization by collectively transforming the way we design, build, operate and decommission buildings.”

Erik Sjödin, partner at McKinsey, said: “Many green building innovations are already cheaper and widely available, such as optimizing designs to reduce demand for raw materials, yet there is a lack of transparency around all these levers and how to scale them quickly and cost-efficiently. There is also a lack of transparent, trustworthy data on comparative climate performance across the value chain to help spur sustainable investment. The Council will help map out new pathways to net zero and create clear, consistent metrics for green investors, insurers, and customers.”

To help catalyze these changes, the Net Zero Built Environment Council aims to:

  • Map out transparent net-zero pathways – Research and promote the most quick and cost-effective pathways to decarbonization of the built world from equipment electrification to low-carbon material substitutes
  • Spread awareness on what is doable – Lower barriers to decarbonization, capture the interest of decision-makers and spur positive pressure to accelerate climate action
  • Cross-sector partnerships – Cross-sector climate partnerships to share resources and collectively commercialize green technologies at global scale or form lighthouse projects

To read McKinsey’s findings in detail, click here.

About McKinsey & Company

McKinsey & Company is a global management consulting firm committed to helping organizations create Change that Matters. In more than 130 cities and 65 countries, their teams help clients across the private, public and social sectors shape bold strategies and transform the way they work, embed technology where it unlocks value, and build capabilities to sustain the change.