US invests US$2 billion for lower-carbon construction at federal buildings

    • “The US government has a huge share of the market -particularly of concrete and asphalt- and that I think helps drive the industry towards meeting an ever increasing level of innovation when it comes to decarbonising,” says John Podesta, White House senior adviser.
    • “The US government has a huge share of the market -particularly of concrete and asphalt- and that I think helps drive the industry towards meeting an ever increasing level of innovation when it comes to decarbonising,” says John Podesta, White House senior adviser. PHOTO: REUTERS
    Published Tue, Nov 7, 2023 · 12:30 AM

    THE Biden administration on Monday (Nov 6) said it will invest US$2 billion in 150 federal building projects across 39 states that use materials that minimise carbon emissions, its latest effort to tackle climate change through government purchasing power.

    The government Services Administration will prioritise the purchase of asphalt, concrete, glass and steel produced and disposed of with lower levels of associated greenhouse gas emissions that meet a global standard for environmental products.

    “The US government has a huge share of the market -particularly of concrete and asphalt- and that I think helps drive the industry towards meeting an ever increasing level of innovation when it comes to decarbonising,” John Podesta, senior adviser to President Joe Biden, told Reuters.

    Podesta oversees the implmentation of the administration’s Inflation Reduction Act, which provides nearly US$4 billion to the GSA to invest in low-carbon buildings. He said the investments will help to tackle emissions from sectors that are among the hardest to decarbonise.

    Podesta and GSA Administrator Robin Carnahan announced the investments during a visit to Topeka, Kansas, where a federal building and courthouse will receive US$25 million of the US$2 billion in planned investments to retrofit the facility to make it more energy efficient.

    Asphalt, concrete, glass and steel are among the most carbon-intensive construction materials. They account for nearly half of all US manufacturing greenhouse gas emissions, according to the GSA.

    The administration has a goal to have a net-zero emissions federal building portfolio by 2045 and net-zero emissions in government procurement by 2050. REUTERS

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