Lighting for net zero
A new paper published by the Building Research Establishment (BRE), has explored the world of lighting in our journey to hit net zero targets.
This paper outlines progress and priorities for lighting with a focus on efficiency, circularity and daylighting as we transition our buildings to net zero and beyond.
Key findings
Our headline recommendations for lighting to continue to be a successful part of the net zero pathway include:
- More empirical research on how the successful rollout of low energy lighting has impacted energy use in homes and business buildings
- Consideration to the extension of building regulation requitements for lightings controls in our buildings for both homes and offices
- Setting a trajectory for building regulations to address embodied carbon emissions including those from lighting.
- Lighting manufacturing and markets needing to be designed for circularity
- The planning process to emphasise the benefits of daylight
- The development of a building daylight indicator to allow for an early comparison between buildings and the consideration of daylight against other aspects of sustainability.
The low energy lighting roll out is a net zero success story. It’s time for a policy focus on the next steps in the sustainable lighting transition.
Read the full report
For all the findings and recommendations from our research into sustainable lighting, read the full report.
Share
Related Articles
BREEAM
BREEAM podcast to explore sustainability solutions and trends with industry leaders
News
Global Alliance Unlocks Billions for Decarbonizing Buildings at Scale
News
BuildAudIt AI Platform to transform the circular economy for existing buildings
News
Global green building alliance launches industry-first guide on net zero
News
Buildings to prove they are net zero carbon with UK’s first agreed methodology: UK Net Zero Carbon Buildings Standard
BREEAM
Viking link project awarded BREEAM Infrastructure "Very Good" certification
Awards
BRE announces winners of the BREEAM Awards 2019
BREEAM Conference