Litcius/Paper detail

Building materials could store more than 16 billion tonnes of CO <sub>2</sub> annually

Elisabeth Van Roijen, Sabbie A. Miller, Steven J. Davis

2025Science87 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Achieving net-zero greenhouse gas emissions likely entails not only lowering emissions but also deploying carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) removal technologies. We explored the annual potential to store CO 2 in building materials. We found that fully replacing conventional building materials with CO 2 -storing alternatives in new infrastructure could store as much as 16.6 ± 2.8 billion tonnes of CO 2 each year—roughly 50% of anthropogenic CO 2 emissions in 2021. The total storage potential is far more sensitive to the scale of materials used than the quantity of carbon stored per unit mass of materials. Moreover, the carbon storage reservoir of building materials will grow in proportion to demand for such materials, which could reduce demand for more costly or environmentally risky geological, terrestrial, or ocean storage.

Topics & Concepts

TonneGreenhouse gasEnvironmental scienceCarbon dioxideUnit (ring theory)Waste managementCarbon fibersBusinessNatural resource economicsEngineeringChemistryComputer scienceOceanographyGeologyMathematicsOrganic chemistryAlgorithmEconomicsMathematics educationComposite numberEnvironmental Impact and SustainabilityCarbon Dioxide Capture TechnologiesCO2 Sequestration and Geologic Interactions