Carbon
Emissions of Infrastructure Development
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Abstract
Identifying
strategies for reconciling human development and climate
change mitigation requires an adequate understanding of how infrastructures
contribute to well-being and greenhouse gas emissions. While direct
emissions from infrastructure use are well-known, information about
indirect emissions from their construction is highly fragmented. Here,
we estimated the carbon footprint of the existing global infrastructure
stock in 2008, assuming current technologies, to be 122 (−20/+15)
Gt CO<sub>2</sub>. The average per-capita carbon footprint of infrastructures
in industrialized countries (53 (±6) t CO<sub>2</sub>) was approximately
5 times larger that that of developing countries (10 (±1) t CO<sub>2</sub>). A globalization of Western infrastructure stocks using
current technologies would cause approximately 350 Gt CO<sub>2</sub> from materials production, which corresponds to about 35–60%
of the remaining carbon budget available until 2050 if the average
temperature increase is to be limited to 2 °C, and could thus
compromise the 2 °C target. A promising but poorly explored mitigation
option is to build new settlements using less emissions-intensive
materials, for example by urban design; however, this strategy is
constrained by a lack of bottom-up data on material stocks in infrastructures.
Infrastructure development must be considered in post-Kyoto climate
change agreements if developing countries are to participate on a
fair basis