This month marks the 50 anniversary of Earth Day, and to celebrate, we’re taking a look at how the ongoing lockdown has reduced carbon consumption around the world.
Approximately a third of the world’s population is currently under lockdown, and businesses are being forced to reconsider the resilience of their processes. While the global quarantine has proven difficult for employees and businesses around the world, these ‘stay at home’ policies have resulted in several positive outcomes. With non-essential workers not currently commuting, occupying and working at commercial properties, fewer carbon emissions are being produced worldwide.
At one point, China’s carbon emissions fell by around 25% over a four-week period, equivalent to around 200m tonnes of CO2 (MtCO2). The effects in India and the U.S. have been massive too, with both reducing their carbon usage by an estimated 2 billion tons in 2020 as a result of the ongoing lockdown. This is a mind boggling number, particularly since the average American uses 15.8 tons per year.
The residents of major cities like New Delhi, Venice, Milan and Jakarta are getting the chance to rediscover their own horizons as the smog lifts. The stark ‘before and after’ images expose the extent of the pollution in capital cities around the world.
As countries begin to consider slowly reopening, it’s clear that many of the lessons learned in the past few months hold lasting value for the fight against climate change moving forward. More companies than ever are encouraging their employees to work from home; consumers have been forced to streamline their routines; and our collective overdependence on oil has temporarily eased.
Now is the time for both the public and private sector to take stock of the past several weeks. We need to consider the positive elements of this ongoing lockdown, and which practices should carry on even once these temporary measures are lifted. Individuals also need to take the opportunity to be mindful of their habits, consume less and distinguish their day-to-day wants from their needs.
Some real estate companies are actually using the current economic pause to upscale their tech and interrogate their own operational efficiency. Because the buildings and construction sector accounted for 39% of energy and process-related carbon emissions globally in 2018, this can only be a good thing. The events surrounding Earth Day 2020 provide a blunt reminder that from a sustainability perspective, we all have lots of room to improve.
Talk to a smart building expert to learn more about how Switch helps portfolio managers reach their sustainability goals.
5 articles found
This e-book explains how the right smart building platform can facilitate the green building certification process, streamlining communications between departments and across different sources, to help you efficiently measure progress, create performance benchmarks and determine how to conserve resources.
This e-book explains what effect global crises can have on real estate asset value. Discover how smart building tech can reduce operating costs and increase asset value while still delivering a safe, comfortable tenant experience.
We partnered with smart buildings expert and author of “Smarter Buildings. Better Experiences.,” Bruce Duyshart, to create this comprehensive roadmap to guide your strategic smart buildings program strategy development.
As a building manager you’re constantly juggling competing priorities like rising energy costs, pressure to save money, facility management staff cuts, tenant demands, investor and board expectations and more.
This e-book explains why remote building analysis, reporting and control is essential during a global crisis. Receive practical advice on how to use smart building tech to adjust your operations, reducing operating and energy costs while still delivering a safe, comfortable tenant experience for essential workers.
This white paper explores the meaning of the term “smart building,” and the value associated with investing in a smart building program. It presents best practices for creating a smart building program and utilizing connected, IoT technology across a portfolio.
As climate change intensifies, the urgency to act on one of our biggest levers—energy use in commercial and retail buildings—has never been clearer. Every kilowatt saved is a step closer to sustainability, slashing greenhouse gas emissions while moving us toward essential climate goals. Whether you’re overseeing a retail portfolio or managing a single commercial space, boosting energy efficiency doesn’t just cut costs—it creates healthier, more comfortable spaces for everyone. Now is the time to act.
Smart building technology is constantly evolving and improving, and there are several trends that are expected to take center stage in 2023.
When it comes to being a building owner or operator, you have a lot to balance.