Which will have the most impact?

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Net Zero Buildings

Buildings and Cities

A net zero building is one that has zero net energy consumption, producing as much energy, through onsite renewables, as it uses in a year.

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Rank and results by 2050 #79

Net Zero Buildings

What do these numbers mean?

TOTAL CO2-EQ REDUCTION (GT)

Total CO2-equivalent reduction in atmospheric greenhouse gases by 2050 (gigatons)

NET COST (billions US $)

Net cost to implement

SAVINGS (billions US $)

Net savings by 2050

Impact:

There are no numbers on this page because net zero buildings are a mosaic of separate solutions. They draw on smart windows; green roofs; efficient heating, cooling, and water systems; better insulation; distributed energy and storage; and advanced automation. All are treated individually in our analysis. If net zero buildings are calculated as a single solution, assuming 9.7 percent of new buildings will be net zero by 2050, the integrated opportunity is 7.1 gigatons of carbon dioxide.

Vs

Nuclear

Electricity Generation

Nuclear power is complex, expensive, and risky, but it has the potential to avoid emissions from fossil fuel electricity. Project Drawdown considers it a "regrets solution."

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Rank and results by 2050 #20

Nuclear

Reduced CO2: 16 gigatons
Net cost (Billions US$): $0.88
Net operational savings: $1,713.40 billion
What do these numbers mean?

TOTAL CO2-EQ REDUCTION (GT)

Total CO2-equivalent reduction in atmospheric greenhouse gases by 2050 (gigatons)

NET COST (billions US $)

Net cost to implement

SAVINGS (billions US $)

Net savings by 2050

Impact:

Nuclear’s complicated dynamics around safety and public acceptance will influence its future direction—of expansion or contraction. We assume its share of global electricity generation will grow to 13.6 percent by 2030, but slowly decline to 12 percent by 2050. With a longer lifetime than fossil fuel plants resulting in fewer facilities overall, installation of nuclear power plants could cost an additional $900 million, despite the high implementation cost of $4,457 per kilowatt. Net operating savings over thirty years could reach $1.7 trillion. This scenario could result in 16.1 gigatons of carbon dioxide emissions avoided.

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