Title: Measuring Sustainability
1Measuring Sustainability
- Dr Keith Jones
- Reader in Sustainable Buildings
2Scope of the Problem
- The following slides outline the UK Government's
approach to Sustainable Development - delivering
UK sustainable development together. - http//www.sustainable-development.gov.uk/index.h
tm - The past 20 years have seen a growing realisation
that the current model of development is
unsustainable. In other words we are living
beyond our means. From the loss of biodiversity
with the felling of rainforest's or over fishing
to the negative effect our consumption patterns
are having on the environment and the climate.
Our way of life is placing an increasing burden
on the planet - this cannot be sustained.
3Scope of the Problem
- The increasing stress we put on resources and
environmental systems such as water, land and air
cannot go on for ever. Especially as the world's
population continues to increase and we already
see a world where over a billion people live on
less than a dollar a day, more than 800 million
are malnourished, and over two and a half billion
lack access to adequate sanitation. - A widely-used and accepted international
definition of sustainable development is
'development which meets the needs of the present
without compromising the ability of future
generations to meet their own needs' - Globally
we are not even meeting the needs of the present
let alone considering the needs of future
generations.
4Scope of the Problem
- Unless we start to make real progress toward
reconciling these contradictions, we all,
wherever we live, face a future that is less
certain and less secure than we in the UK have
enjoyed over the past fifty years. We need to
make a decisive move toward more sustainable
development both because it is the right thing to
do - and because it is in our own long-term best
interests. It offers the best hope for securing
the future. - The UK Government, Scottish Executive, Welsh
Assembly Government and the Northern Ireland
Administration have agreed upon a set of shared
UK principles that provide a basis for
sustainable development policy in the UK.
5UK priorities
- The UK has four priority areas for immediate
action, shared across the UK, these are - Sustainable Consumption and Production
- Climate Change and Energy
- Natural Resource Protection and Environmental
Enhancement - Sustainable Communities
- The Government also recognises that changing
behaviour is a cross cutting theme closely linked
to all of these priorities. - The principles and approaches are covered in more
detail in and the UK Strategic Securing the
Future - the UK Government's sustainable
development strategy Framework
6Shared UK principles of sustainable development
7What can be done?
- Sustainable development can not be delivered by
Government alone. People can all help to deliver
it by making even the smallest changes in our
lives. - http//www.wearewhatwedo.org/
- http//www.globalactionplan.org.uk/
- http//www.sustainable-development.gov.uk/delivery
/global-local/Whatcancommunitiesdo.htm - http//www.tuc.org.uk/theme/index.cfm?themesustai
nableworkplace - http//www.swapxchange.org/
- http//www.greenchoices.org/
- http//www.btcv.org/
- http//www.yearofthevolunteer.org/
- http//www.roughguide-betterworld.com/
8Policy tools for delivery
- Sustainable development needs to be built into
policy making at all levels. The Government
provides a revised set of shared UK principles in
the new Strategic Framework. There are also a
number of tool kits to support policy makers in
delivery, these are set out below - http//www.sustainable-development.gov.uk/what/too
ls.htm
9Examples of Best Practice
- The Sustainable Development Commission have set
up a database of case studies. http//www.sustaina
ble-development.gov.uk/what/best-practice.htm - Business
- World Business Council for Sustainable
Development - Environment
- Envirowise
- Commission for Architecture and the Built
Environment - Parks and Public Spaces - Energy Saving Trust
- Housing and Planning
- Office of the Deputy Prime Minister - Planning
Guidance - Design for homes
- Commission for Architecture and the Built
Environment - Regeneration
- Renewal.net
- Crimereduction.gov.uk
10Key priority areas
- As a result of the 2004 consultation to develop
new UK sustainable development strategy the
following issues have been highlighted as the
main priority areas for immediate action. - Sustainable consumption and production - working
towards achieving more with less. - Natural resource protection and environmental
enhancement - protecting the natural resources on
which we depend. - From local to global building sustainable
communities creating places where people want to
live and work, now and in the future. - Climate change and energy - confronting the
greatest threat. - In addition to these four priorities changing
behaviour also forms a large part of the
Governments thinking on sustainable development.
11UK Government Sustainable Development Strategy
indicators
- The UK Government has established a new set of
high-level indicators the UK Framework
Indicators to give an overview of sustainable
development and the priority areas shared across
the UK. - In addition to the shared UK Framework Indicators
there are indicators, targets and performance
measures in the individual strategies for the UK
Government, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
These will underpin the shared framework
priorities while reflecting the respective
priorities of each administration. - Indicators for the UK Government Strategy include
all 20 of the UK Framework Indicators and a
further 48 indicators related to the priority
areas.
12UK Government Sustainable Development Framework
indicators
- The link gives a summary of assessments for the
20 UK sustainable development strategy Framework
indicators. These give an overview of sustainable
development and highlight priority areas shared
across the UK. http//www.sustainable-developmen
t.gov.uk/performance/framework.htm - The link below gives a summary of assessments for
the other 48 (non-Framework) indicators
supporting the UK Government Sustainable
Development Strategy. http//www.sustainable-devel
opment.gov.uk/performance/otherinds.htm
13Sustainable Construction Indicators
- Sustainable construction is monitored through
Constructing Excellence. www.constructingexcellenc
e.org.uk - The demonstrations programme is at the heart of
Constructing Excellence. This provides the
opportunity for leading edge organisations, from
every part of construction, to bring forward
exemplars that demonstrate innovation and change,
which can be measured, evaluated and shared.
These can be site-based or organisational-change
projects. There are more than 400 projects in the
programme, with a total value of over 7bn. They
examples of off-site construction,
standardisation, the use of new technology,
respect for people activities, partnering and
supply chain integration, and other areas of
process improvement. The demonstrations have
developed a culture of performance measurement as
the primary way to verify innovation and
improvement.
14Sustainable Construction Indicators
- Constructing Excellence has a commitment to
sustainability. The Housing Forum formed a
Sustainability Working Group in 2000 and produced
a report in 2001. The Best Practice Knowledge
stream (previously Movement for Innovation (M4I))
also formed a Sustainability Working Group and a
spreadsheet tool called the Sustainability Index
was created, covering social, economic and
environmental factors. However, with the industry
grappling with the changes initiated its use was
limited. The Sustainability Working Group next
published an initial set of benchmarks for
environmental performance indicators (EPIs) in
2001 and these have been developed into the
Environment Key Performance Indicators which were
first published in 2003.
15Sustainable Construction Indicators
- Work for the Local Government Task Force (LGTF)
on a Sustainable Construction Action Plan
highlighted the many roles and responsibilities
local government can utilise to encourage,
procure and produce more sustainable
construction. More sustainable construction
becomes a tangible prospect now that - industry has become comfortable with using key
performance measures - Environment Key Performance Indicators are
becoming mainstream, through incorporation in the
DTI annual surveys and client specification - Respect for People toolkits and Design Quality
Indicator (DQI) have been launched.
16Sustainable Construction Indicators
- To embed and mainstream sustainability into
Constructing Excellence's own demonstrations, a
checklist was compiled in late 2002. The
checklist is based upon the Sustainable
Construction Action Plan and the Sustainability
Index, utilising the outputs of all the
sustainability working groups, and considering
the latest thinking and practice of sustainable
construction. This checklist is being made
available to all new demonstrations through the
National Strategy Panel, to provoke thought and
further innovation.
17Sustainable Construction Indicators
- Many of the past and current demonstrations
address aspects of sustainability included in the
checklist. Constructing Excellence wish to
celebrate the innovations, and prove that the
checklist provides an achievable framework, that
future demonstrations and the whole industry can
aspire to. - This website examines each section and criterion
of the checklist in the context of a construction
project moving from - planning
- design
- construction process
- finished product
18Sustainable Construction Indicators
- Each stage looks at economic, social and
environmental issues and uses past and current
demonstrations to show how the criteria can be
met. This website does not feature every
demonstration that has tackled sustainability,
but the full range of such projects can be
accessed in the Demonstrations' area of the
website. Some of the demonstrations prove many of
the checklist criteria, but to enable this report
to show the breadth of achievement by the
demonstrations, each demonstration is used to
highlight only one criterion from the checklist,
with a couple of exceptions. This structure helps
users find the areas of interest to them, and it
must be stressed that all areas are
interconnected and impact upon each other.
19Review of Toolkits
- A research group led by the University of Dundee
has been evaluating the usefulness of a range of
sustainability toolkits. - Environmental
- Social
- The researchers also held a series of workshops
to
20Environmental Toolkits
- 147 environmental toolkits were identified.
- 41 were partially evaluated
- Problems with accessing information
- 25 were fully evaluated.
- Urban planning tools
- Macro level
- Design tools
- Building level
- Assessment tools
- LCA approach
- Infrastructure tools
- CEEQUAL project based
21Environmental Toolkits
- Each toolkit was assessed against a range of
characteristics - Flexibility adaptability to situation
- Upgrading longevity
- Compatibility input/output to other toolkits
- Aggregation/Disaggregation score breakdown
- Holistic does it cover whole building life
cycle - Multidimensional triple bottom line
- Inclusive range of stakeholders
- Scaleable from building through neighbourhood
to city and beyond. - The toolkits were also assessed for data issues
- Type quantitative/qualitataive
- Source calculated, estimated, secondary (eg
location)
22Environmental Toolkits
- Findings (derived from the report)
- Urban planning and rating systems are the most
developed. - Very few toolkits covered all aspects of
sustainability effectively. - Input data is critical if the outputs are to be
defensible. - A full analysis of each toolkit can be found at
http//www.sue-mot.org.uk/
23Social Toolkits
- Over 100 tookits identified
- 78 evaluated
- Clustered in broad categories
- Analysed according to
- What situations they applied to
- Scale site to international
- Stage of life cycle
- Sector public/private
- Issues education, crime etc
- Data quantitative/qualitative
- Analysis reductionist (eg reduces to money)
- Outputs descriptive/predictive, comparative etc
- Skills needed expert/non expert
- Presentation invisible, visible
24Social Toolkits
- Three main categories were identified
Describing and monitoring the status of
sustainability
Predicting and evaluating sustainability impacts
Modifying peoples perceptions and actions
towards sustainability
25Social Toolkits
- General findings
- There is no such thing as a good toolkit
- Must be considered in context/purpose
- Toolkits do not seem to be converging
- Approach, data, presentation
- Dealing with uncertainty
- Tools that require full detailed data do not
necessarily produce more certain results but
merely mask uncertainty. - This causes problems with mathematical based
models - Few existing toolkits come close to assessing
sustainability - Inclusive, holistic, multi-dimensional, triple
bottom line, political, technical legal etc
26Social Toolkits
- General findings cont
- Sustainability involves judgement about
integration - It may be impossible to develop a true
sustainability toolkit. - Social toolkits are the poor relation in the
triple bottom line. - Toolkits need to be useable and robust
- These are not always compatible
- Several toolkits required so much data and
expertise to use that they were essentially
unusable in practice. - Again further details can be found at
http//www.sue-mot.org.uk/
27SPeAR
- One toolkit that both groups studies was Arups
SPeAR approach.
28Summary
- Measuring sustainability is not straight forward.
- Tools need to be holistic, flexible, robust,
multi-dimensional, scaleable, appropriate,
useable, practicable etc.