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What is Embodied Energy?

Life-Cycle Assessment, Energy   March 25, 2008




Hello. This is Greg Zimmerman, executive editor of Building Operating Management magazine.

Today’s tip involves weighing a building product’s embodied energy as a criterion in a life-cycle assessment.

For facility executives interested in reducing the environmental impact of their buildings, life-cycle assessments for all building products that are installed in a building are increasingly important. This means looking at every phase of a product – from how it is manufactured, to its useful life in the facility, to what happens to the product when it’s useful life is over.

Embodied energy is a key tenet of this life-cycle assessment. Embodied energy is the energy required from a product’s raw material extraction, through its manufacturing process, to its delivery and installation in a building. Obviously, facility executives should look for products with low embodied energies. Often times, building products with lower embodied energies are also less expensive, because the manufacturer’s energy waste isn’t being tacked on to the price of the product.

An important caveat, however, is that facility executives must examine all aspects of a product’s life cycle and weigh the different performance criteria against each other. It’d be hard to argue that a product with a low embodied energy that only lasts for five years and must be replaced is more environmentally responsible than one with a bit higher embodied energy that lasts for 50.

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