Publication: Carbon Footprint Evaluation and Reduction Strategies for a Residential Building in Romania: A Case Study
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Abstract
Single-family residential buildings represent the highest share of building sector
in Romania. Their operation emits the most CO2 into Earth’s atmosphere, as most of them
are not energy efficient. A life cycle assessment is performed for a case study building, built
in 2019 in Romania, establishing its carbon footprint. For this building CO2 emissions are
177.55 tCO2 for the construction stage, 76.19 tCO2 for the operation stage, 3.55 tCO2 for the
demolition stage, and a total of 129.76 tCO2 after reducing with the carbon sequestration
from vegetation 127.53 tCO2. The main purpose of this study is to analyse the carbon footprint
for a typical single-family Romanian household, with an emphasis on the operational
stage. The study compares the results and extrapolates them to all single-family residential
buildings in Romania regarding CO2 emissions, with an emphasis on the operational stage.
The results illustrate a considerable reduction in CO2 emissions from old, high energy
consumption buildings to new, low energy consumption buildings. The highest operational
stage emissions for old buildings in Romania are 962.94 tCO2 for firewood heating and
573.69 tCO2 for gas boiler heating, as those buildings are not insulated and don’t use a
heat pump. Additionally, considering the use of photovoltaic panels for the entire lifespan,
the CO2 emissions for the operational stage decrease for the case study building from
76.18 tCO2 to 19.90 tCO2. Moreover, using a heat pump detriments firewood or gas boilers,
decreasing CO2 emissions for the operational stage by up to 34% and 26%, respectively.
Due to the higher cost of electrical energy compared to natural gas in Romania, gas boilers
are more cost-effective than heat pumps. Because of this, and the higher implementation
costs, the tendency is towards natural gas. This will in turn result in an increase of CO2
emission for the entire life cycle of the building by approximate 32% for new buildings and
86% for old, high-energy-consumption buildings.
