Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6547923 | Land Use Policy | 2015 | 13 Pages |
Abstract
The growing concerns of climate change require implementing measures to quantify, to monitor and to minimize greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. Nonetheless, most of the measures available are not easy to define or execute because they rely on current emissions and have a corrective character. To address this issue, a methodology to characterize GHG emissions that allows implementing preventive measures is proposed in this paper. The methodology is related to household urban planning procedures and considers urban infrastructures to characterize GHG emissions and to execute preventive measures based on sustainability design criteria. The methodology has been tested by applying it to a set of medium-sized municipalities with average GHG emissions from 6,822.32 kgCO2eq/year to 5,913.79 kgCO2eq/year for every residential unit. The results indicate that the greatest pollutant source is transport, especially in the issuance of street network design, followed by gas and electricity consumption. The average undevelopable land area required for the complete GHG emissions capture amounts to 3.42Â m2 of undevelopable land for every m2 of urbanizable land and 9.02Â m2 of undevelopable land for every m2 of built land.
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Authors
Sergio Zubelzu, Roberto Álvarez, Adolfo Hernández,