As urbanization accelerates globally, the debilitative impact of the construction sector on the environment has become increasingly pronounced. In a harrowing forecast, a new international study published on World Cities Day reveals a startling prediction: the carbon footprint of the construction industry is set to double by 2050. Such an increase jeopardizes global attempts to adhere to the Paris Agreement’s climate targets, highlighting a critical area of concern for environmental policymakers and stakeholders alike.
In 2022, a staggering 55% of the construction industry’s carbon emissions originated from cementitious materials, bricks, and metals. This is particularly alarming when considering that glass, plastics, chemicals, and bio-based materials only accounted for 6%. The remaining 37% of emissions were sourced from transport, services, machinery, and on-site activities. This distribution emphasizes the need to scrutinize the primary materials utilized in construction and their associated carbon footprints.
Lead author Chaohui Li from Peking University articulates the gravity of these findings. Reflecting on the transition from 1995 to the present, he noted a troubling trend: the construction sector now generates one-third of global carbon dioxide emissions, a substantial increase from approximately 20% nearly three decades ago. If the current trajectory continues, experts predict that the construction sector could exceed the annual carbon budget necessary for limiting temperature increases to 2°C as early as 2040.
The implications of such projections are dire. Given various emission scenarios based on historical data, the study warns that the construction sector’s carbon output, under business-as-usual conditions, will surpass the annual carbon budgets for the 1.5°C and 2°C targets within the next twenty years, not accounting for emissions from other industries. According to co-author Prajal Pradhan, a professor at the University of Groningen, cumulative construction-related emissions from 2023 to 2050 could soar to an alarming 440 gigatons of carbon dioxide. This figure alone could obliterate the entire remaining global carbon budget designated for keeping the global temperature rise within 1.5°C.
A particularly striking change highlighted by the study is the shift of carbon emissions from developed to developing regions. In 1995, high-income nations contributed to around half the emissions from construction activities. Fast forward to 2022, emissions in developed economies have largely plateaued while developing regions have seen a surge, largely due to their increasing dependence on carbon-intensive materials like steel and cement. This trend further underscores a missed opportunity as the use of bio-based materials—like timber—has been on the decline, signaling a pivotal moment in construction practices.
Amid this concerning landscape, the authors of the study advocate for a global “material revolution.” This revolution would necessitate a fundamental transformation in the materials used for construction, promoting the adoption of low-carbon, circular, and bio-based alternatives. Suggested materials include engineered timber, bamboo, and recycled composites, which could drastically reduce the sector’s carbon emissions. Given that cementitious materials, bricks, and metals currently represent over half of the construction sector’s emissions, the urgency for such a fundamental shift cannot be overstated.
Co-author Jürgen Kropp from the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research elaborates on the socio-economic disparities in the challenges of decarbonizing construction. He notes that solutions are not uniformly applicable worldwide and that significant changes across the supply chain — particularly in materials — are crucial. High-income regions should spearhead innovations in circular design and enforce stricter regulations, while developing nations must receive targeted financial and technological aid to adopt sustainable building practices. Such collaborative strategies could facilitate a leapfrog effect, enabling developing regions to bypass more polluting practices altogether.
The study’s dire warning emphasizes that without a concerted global effort to transition to sustainable construction materials, the construction sector alone could consume the entire remaining carbon budget for the 1.5°C goal within the next two decades. The call to action is clear: industry leaders, policymakers, and researchers must band together to finalize strategies that enable systemic changes in construction relations to low-carbon materials.
As urban areas intensify and populations swell, the environmental impact of the construction sector will become increasingly critical in striving for sustainable and resilient cities. The research presented is among the most comprehensive to date, incorporating data from 49 countries and regions as well as 163 sectors spanning 1995 to 2022.
IIASA Director General Hans Joachim Schellnhuber encapsulates the urgency of the situation effectively, stating, “Humanity has literally built itself into a corner with steel and cement.” He implores that to adhere to the Paris Agreement’s goals, we must rethink the very materials that define the architecture of our cities. A global material revolution, founded upon circularity, innovation, and cooperative efforts, holds the potential to transform the construction sector from being a climate antagonist into a reliable pillar of a sustainable and adaptable future.
The resounding takeaway from the study is that addressing the carbon footprint of construction is not merely an environmental necessity but an instrumental part of broader climate action. If we are to shift the course of future carbon emissions from construction toward a more sustainable approach, it will require extensive cooperation, ingenuity, and an unwavering commitment to transformative practices in the building methods that shape our urban landscapes.
Subject of Research: Carbon emissions from the construction sector
Article Title: Carbon footprint of the construction sector is projected to double by 2050 globally
News Publication Date: 27-Oct-2025
Web References: Study DOI
References: Li, C., Pradhan, P., Chen, G., Kropp, J., & Schellnhuber, H.J. (2025). Communications Earth and Environment.
Image Credits: Li et al. (2025)
Keywords: Construction emissions, carbon footprint, sustainability, cement, timber, circular economy, climate change, urbanization, material revolution.
Tags: carbon emissions from construction materialscement and carbon footprintconstruction industry environmental challengesfuture of sustainable building practicesglobal construction carbon footprintimplications of construction on climate changeParis Agreement and construction sectorreducing carbon emissions in constructionrole of policymakers in construction emissionssustainability in construction industrytrends in construction carbon emissionsurbanization and environmental impact


