From Policy to Implementation—An Analytic Network Process (ANP)-Based Assessment Tool for Low Carbon Urban and Neighborhood Planning

To achieve the goals of carbon peaking, a national policy instrument for carbon peaking in the building and construction sector has been launched by the Chinese MOHURD (30 June 2022). We have developed an actionable framework for implementing these policy objectives. The framework was designed by cl...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inBuildings (Basel) Vol. 13; no. 2; p. 484
Main Authors Lei, Qinghua, Lau, Stephen Siu Yu, Fan, Yue, Fu, Ivan Chin Shing, Chan, Joseph Tin Yeung, Tao, Yiqi, Zhang, Ling, Lai, Hongzhan, Miao, Yijia, Qi, Yi
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Basel MDPI AG 01.02.2023
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Summary:To achieve the goals of carbon peaking, a national policy instrument for carbon peaking in the building and construction sector has been launched by the Chinese MOHURD (30 June 2022). We have developed an actionable framework for implementing these policy objectives. The framework was designed by classifying and prioritizing selected strategic government recommendations in the form of an interactive indicator system and tool for evaluating the quality of low-carbon urban and neighborhood planning actions based on the decarbonation principles of carbon emission reduction and carbon capture. The analytic network process (ANP) was applied for processing the interactions and prioritizing the indicators (23 in total for the two principles applied). A scorecard was designed for assessing low-carbon urban and neighborhood planning strategies and technologies. The practical implementation of the tool was then tested with two real planning cases, one from a fourth-tier Chinese city and another from a high-density city. The applicability of the tool is further discussed by comparing it with well-developed international assessment tools in other contexts. This article contributes to the literature by first initiating research on the use of this evaluative tool for low-carbon planning and secondly by demonstrating how researchers can convert policies into practical implementations.
ISSN:2075-5309
2075-5309
DOI:10.3390/buildings13020484