Source : Business Times – 7 May 2009
Powered by solar energy generated on its roof, Taipei 101, the world’s tallest completed building, is not only a leader for its breathtaking height but also for its eco-friendly features.
Finished in 2004, the skyscraper is a rare example of green design in Asia, a region with the world’s busiest construction sector yet one of the poorest records for eco-friendly building.
China alone is said to be building half of the world’s new floor space, but the vast majority of these new projects will be energy guzzlers. Environmentalists worry that these buildings will produce high carbon emissions for decades to come.
‘Energy efficiency is fast becoming one of the defining issues of our times, and buildings are that issue’s ‘elephant in the room’,’ Bjorn Stigson, president of the World Business Council for Sustainable Development, said in a statement.
‘Buildings use more energy than any other sector and as such are a major contributor to climate change,’ he added.
In China, 80 per cent of the nearly one billion square metres of new buildings constructed every year are high-energy buildings that consume two to three times more energy per unit of floor-space than buildings in developed countries, according to a report by the Asia Business Council.
Beijing and other governments in the region are trying to encourage green construction, but Asia lags far behind Europe which has a 2019 deadline for all new buildings to produce the same amount of energy they consume.
Office buildings use at least 30 per cent of an average country’s total energy consumption and produce a similar proportion of their greenhouse gas emissions.
Turning buildings green could reduce carbon emissions by 1.8 billion tonnes per year worldwide, according to the United Nations Environment programme. That is easier said than done, especially in Asia, where the bottom line is often all that counts.
Asia’s price-sensitive builders baulk at the steeper materials and construction costs for green buildings, about 5 per cent higher, for features ranging from alternative energy systems to fixtures such as low-energy lights and reinforced glass that cuts down on heating and air-conditioning costs.
Despite the initial higher cost of environmentally friendly construction, architects say that it pays for itself after five or 10 years due to lower energy and water bills.
Apart from the energy savings, developers usually get higher rent yields if their buildings are ‘green’.
‘Asia is the latecomer,’ said Peter Halliday, vice-president of Siemens Ltd Taiwan. ‘It’s true that the developers are (still) holding back on green buildings, though over the life of a building you get your money back.’
Experts hope that pressure from Western firms for ‘green’ office space that includes features ranging from low-energy lights to waste recycling, might change that in the coming years.
‘There are an increasing number of multinationals and large overseas corporations that require green-rated buildings,’ said Tan Loke Man, head of the Malaysian Architects Association. ‘This will be the case as more and more companies become more environmentally concerned.’
China aims to reduce energy use by 60 per cent in new buildings, offering tax rebates as incentives. But ‘enforcement is always an issue in China’, said Janet Pau, from the Asia Business Council, which monitors green construction.
‘China needs to do more. They need a more coordinated building policy,’ Ms Pau added. ‘Buildings last for decades and just by being there, they will slowly be damaging to the environment.’
The government’s efforts, as well as demand from foreign firms for green office space, has spurred several high profile projects that may kindle interest in low-energy buildings across the region.
The Shanghai Tower, in China’s commercial capital, will minimise wind resistance and energy consumption when it is completed in 2014 at a cost of US$2.2 billion.
The building will house 54 wind turbines to power heating and air-conditioning, along with a rainwater collection system.
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