Conservative MP revives bill shelved in March after original backer was appointed to housing department job
Mothballed proposals to cut carbon emissions in construction projects by amending building regulations have been put back on the table.
Conservative MP Jerome Mayhew has reintroduced a private member鈥檚 bill to parliament which would see mandatory limits placed on embodied carbon at the design stage of projects within the next few years.
The Carbon Emission (好色先生TVs) Bill was originally proposed by Mayhew鈥檚 fellow Tory MP Duncan Baker in February but when Baker was appointed to a new job in the housing department. Parliamentary procedure means that private member鈥檚 bills cannot be submitted by an MP whose role overlaps with the proposed policy.
Mayhew鈥檚 revival of the bill comes a month after the cross-party environmental audit committee published a report
The report said that assessments of emissions involved in the construction, operation, maintenance and demolition of a building should be written into the regulatory and planning system.
Mayhew鈥檚 bill is based on a major initiative called 鈥淧art Z鈥, named for the proposed new section in the regulations, which has been backed by more than 100 industry heavyweights including architects AHMM, Allies & Morrison, BDP, dRMM, Hawkins\Brown, Haworth Tompkins and Hopkins, as well as with the RIBA.
Embodied carbon, which is produced by the production, transport and use of materials, accounts for around 25% of the UK鈥檚 emissions, more than aviation and shipping combined.
Part Z proposes that all projects greater than 1,000sq m, or 10 dwellings, must assess and report their whole-life carbon from 2023 for non-residential schemes and from 2025 for residential schemes.
Institute of Structural Engineers head of climate action Will Arnold, one of Part Z鈥檚 five authors, said that regulation of embodied carbon was 鈥渟omething which is vitally important to do if the government is serious about decarbonising the construction industry as part of its net zero plans鈥.
It is not clear if the government plans to support the proposals. The department for levelling up, housing and communities has said that it welcomes the issue being raised and that it is 鈥渆xploring the potential鈥 of maximum embodied carbon levels for new buildings in the future.
Part Z has been a source of some controversy in the construction industry because of the potential impact of higher building costs on SMEs.
Rico Wojtulewicz, head of housing and planning at the House Builders Association, a trade body representing SME housebuilders, said in March that smaller firms were not given 鈥渆nough of a consideration鈥 in the plans.
Mark Shouler, director of Nottinghamshire housebuilder Hofton & Son, said the extra costs of making schemes compliant under the new rules would make it 鈥渃ompletely and utterly pointless building houses鈥.
The Part Z authors said in a joint statement that the final values of the requirements for projects had not been finalised and would be revised through public consultation before they came into force.
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