An IKEA-Style Solution to Making Houses More Sustainable

A flat-packed renovation aims to improve the energy efficiency of homes that already exist

Stephen Moore
Future Human

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Photo: Pexels

Under the Paris climate agreement, the world is attempting to limit the dangerous global temperature rise to a maximum of 1.5 degrees Celsius. The agreement has also set an ambitious target for the European Union to be climate neutral (net-zero carbon dioxide emissions) by 2050. In addition to the usual suspects causing global warming, such as burning fossil fuels, significant contributions also come from the buildings that make up the towns and cities around us.

But now, a Danish architecture company is developing easy-to-install kits aimed at making homes more energy efficient. If produced on a global scale, they could have a major impact on the climate contributions of buildings everywhere.

Residential and commercial buildings account for over 40% of all energy consumption and over 30% of all carbon dioxide emissions in the United States. This is measured with a combination of two factors: operational carbon emissions, which refers to those released during the day-to-day use of a building, from heating and cooling a home to keeping the lights on in an office environment; and the “embodied carbon” of a building, which is the carbon released…

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Future Human
Future Human

Published in Future Human

Future Human was science publication from Medium about the survival of our species. Currently inactive and not taking submissions.

Stephen Moore
Stephen Moore

Written by Stephen Moore

Writer, editor, part-time furniture maker. Subscribe to Trend Mill for critical takes on our dystopian metaverse hellscape future - https://www.trend-mill.com