Current:Home > reviewsA Dutch Approach To Cutting Carbon Emissions From Buildings Is Coming To America -Clarity Finance Guides
A Dutch Approach To Cutting Carbon Emissions From Buildings Is Coming To America
View
Date:2025-04-26 13:27:08
THE HAGUE, Netherlands — The Biden administration has announced in recent months plans to significantly reduce carbon emissions over the next decade or two, and cut them on a net basis to zero by 2050. Other developed nations have made similar pledges.
But experts say governments have not always provided enough details, or action, to ensure these objectively ambitious targets — entailing massive changes to economies and societies — can be met.
One big obstacle: hundreds of millions of existing homes. Without some form of action, most of today's homes will still be inhabited in 2050 with inefficient heating and lighting that causes unnecessary carbon emissions. The United Nations estimates that residential buildings are responsible for around a fifth of all global emissions.
In the Netherlands, a government initiative forced engineers, architects, entrepreneurs, marketing specialists and financiers to get together and figure out the best way to solve this problem of retrofitting older homes cheaply and quickly.
The result of those meetings was a concept called "Energiesprong" — or "energy leap" — that has formed the basis of efforts to mass produce and industrialize the once haphazard and expensive retrofit process.
Now that approach has been replicated in several other countries, including the U.S., where New York state is investing $30 million in a similar effort.
veryGood! (7)
Related
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Khloe Kardashian Says She Hates Being in Her 30s After Celebrating 39th Birthday
- A ‘Living Shoreline’ Takes Root in New York’s Jamaica Bay
- From mini rooms to streaming, things have changed since the last big writers strike
- Bill Belichick's salary at North Carolina: School releases football coach's contract details
- New York Is Facing a Pandemic-Fueled Home Energy Crisis, With No End in Sight
- Space Tourism Poses a Significant ‘Risk to the Climate’
- A tobacco giant will pay $629 million for violating U.S. sanctions against North Korea
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- New Study Says World Must Cut Short-Lived Climate Pollutants as Well as Carbon Dioxide to Meet Paris Agreement Goals
Ranking
- Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
- Nuclear Energy Industry Angles for Bigger Role in Washington State and US as Climate Change Accelerates
- A magazine touted Michael Schumacher's first interview in years. It was actually AI
- Warming Trends: Nature and Health Studies Focused on the Privileged, $1B for Climate School and Old Tires Detour Into Concrete
- Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
- Jesse Palmer Teases Wild Season of Bachelor in Paradise
- The weight bias against women in the workforce is real — and it's only getting worse
- The Clean Energy Transition Enters Hyperdrive
Recommendation
How to watch new prequel series 'Dexter: Original Sin': Premiere date, cast, streaming
Warming Trends: Carbon-Neutral Concrete, Climate-Altered Menus and Olympic Skiing in Vanuatu
College Acceptance: Check. Paying For It: A Big Question Mark.
FERC Says it Will Consider Greenhouse Gas Emissions and ‘Environmental Justice’ Impacts in Approving New Natural Gas Pipelines
Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
Inside Hilarie Burton and Jeffrey Dean Morgan's Incredibly Private Marriage
When you realize your favorite new song was written and performed by ... AI
Love Island’s Ekin-Su Cülcüloğlu and Davide Sanclimenti Break Up