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Decarbonising The Built Environment: The Strategic Impact Of GBPN

The buildings and construction sector is one of the most consequential contributors to global greenhouse gas (GHG), emissions — responsible for a significant share of carbon emissions both in operation (energy use), and in construction materials and processes. Despite improvements in efficiency, the sector remains off track to meet global climate targets, with emissions trends showing persistent growth due to urbanisation and expanding building stock.

In this context, the Global Buildings Performance Network (GBPN), emerges as a specialised global actor focused on accelerating the decarbonisation of buildings — not just technically, but through policy, markets, and collaborative networks.

The Core Mission: Policy-Driven Decarbonisation

At its heart, GBPN operates as a policy reform catalyst, supporting countries, cities and regions to advance building climate policies that reduce emissions. The organisation’s mission is to transform one of the world’s “most significant carbon pollution sources” — the built environment — into a pathway for climate action.

This focus on policy is critical: while technological solutions (like heat pumps, solar integration, or efficient materials), are essential, policy frameworks create the regulatory certainty and incentives needed for broad, rapid adoption.

Bridging Policy and Practice: Coalitions and Networks

A distinctive strength of GBPN is the coalition and network approach. Rather than operating in isolation, GBPN brings together government officials, industry leaders, researchers and civil society practitioners into collaborative structures that help transform ambition into real-world action.

Coalitions for Change

GBPN supports multi-stakeholder coalitions at national and subnational levels that:

In practice, these coalitions help governments draft better building codes, accelerate implementation of standards, and promote financing mechanisms that support sustainable construction and renovation activities.

Networked Knowledge Transfer

Across more than 20 countries, GBPN’s network accelerates learning and adoption of effective practices.

Through convenings, webinars, and shared evidence libraries, local practitioners gain access to:

These networks significantly enhance the scalability of climate innovations by preventing duplication of effort and fostering cross-regional learning.

Amplifying Market Transformation and Just Transitions

GBPN emphasises not just regulatory reform but market transformation, recognising that decarbonisation must align with private sector incentives and equitable access to sustainable buildings:

This aligns with broader climate equity goals: as cities grow and populations urbanise, especially in emerging economies, strategic policy and financial interventions can help ensure that sustainable building standards are inclusive, affordable, and climate‑resilient.

Impact at Scale: Evidence and Outcomes

Although measuring impact in global decarbonisation is complex, early evidence highlights key pathways through which GBPN contributes:

Though the overall sector remains behind the pace required for net‑zero targets, GBPN’s approach aligns with evidence showing that ambitious policy packages, when effectively implemented, can significantly reduce demand growth and emissions over time.

Infographic: How GBPN Drives Building Decarbonisation

The Problem

The Solution: GBPN Approach

Policy Transformation

Impact: Creates enforceable pathways to reduce emissions at scale – (to mention  but a few….)

Conclusion: A Strategic Lever for Climate Action

The Global Buildings Performance Network (GBPN), plays a pivotal role in mobilising systemic change in the buildings and construction sector. Through policy influence, coalition building, expert networks, and market engagement, GBPN helps accelerate decarbonisation pathways that are technically sound, economically feasible and socially equitable.

In a sector that is not only large but continually expanding — with billions of square metres of new floor area expected globally by 2050 — the work of organisations like GBPN is essential to unlocking scalable climate benefits and ensuring the built environment becomes part of the solution to the climate crisis rather than a growing problem.

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