The HAUS project modelled 85 individual construction products. Of those, just 13 had product-specific EPDs. The remainder were filled in with conservative generic data points, which by design tends to overestimate environmental impact.
This isn’t just a modelling artefact — it’s a commercial disadvantage. Generic product data can make products appear more carbon-intensive than they are, and when specifiers are selecting products to meet tight carbon budgets, they will naturally favour those with verified, specific, and transparent data.
Backed by One Click LCA’s 2025 Carbon Experts Report, we know this isn’t speculation:
The HAUS LCA focused on A1–A3 stages (cradle to gate), covering raw material extraction, transportation, and manufacturing. With a total impact of 38,854 kgCO₂e (or 474 kgCO₂e/m²), it performed 24% better than the UK benchmark of 624 kgCO₂e/m², as defined by LETI.
But the deeper value lay in understanding where carbon was hiding:
Lesson for specifiers and designers: assumptions are risky. Only real LCA data reveals the true carbon cost of materials.
It’s not just about meeting regulatory pressure — it’s about staying in the game.
The HAUS project showed that manufacturers with EPDs are far more likely to be selected, especially during early design when the largest carbon savings can be made. Beyond visibility, LCA is a powerful internal optimisation tool. Manufacturers routinely report 10–30% carbon reductions through product iteration informed by LCA data.
This aligns with the HAUS result itself: although only conceptual, the design used renewable materials like timber and biobased insulation to deliver a negative net embodied carbon impact when biogenic sequestration is included:
-46,478 kgCO₂e sequestered, vs. 38,854 emitted — resulting in a net impact of -7,624 kgCO₂e.
Across both the UK and Ireland, the regulatory momentum is clear — and accelerating.
The RIBA 2030 Climate Challenge targets 300–450 kgCO₂e/m² for new residential buildings — a threshold the HAUS design is already nearing, even at the conceptual stage and with minimal EPD data.
Meanwhile, the Greater London Authority’s Whole Life Carbon (WLC) reporting mandates detailed LCA submissions for major planning applications, setting a precedent many local authorities are expected to follow.
In Ireland, the Climate Action Plan outlines a national roadmap for decarbonising construction. A National Strategy for Sustainable Construction is currently in development, anticipated to introduce LCA and embodied carbon limits aligned with both UK benchmarks and EU law.
In the UK Parliament, Part Z — an industry-led proposal endorsed by hundreds of stakeholders — seeks to embed whole-life carbon assessment and reporting into the Building Regulations. Though not yet law, it signals growing consensus that embodied carbon must be addressed alongside operational performance. Part Z proposes:
RICS (Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors) has also taken a leading role in defining best practice. The RICS Whole Life Carbon Assessment for the Built Environment standard is already widely referenced in public and private procurement and underpins much of the UK’s voluntary carbon reporting. It provides a robust framework for LCA, aligned with EN 15978, and will likely become the basis for future regulatory requirements.
For manufacturers exporting to the EU, change is already legislated:
Further layers of compliance will come via:
The clear takeaway: waiting for a client to ask for an EPD is too late. If your product isn’t verifiably in the system, it simply won’t be considered. Regulatory expectations are shifting from voluntary best practice to binding requirements — and fast. Now is the time for manufacturers to act.
HAUS was more than a showcase home. It was a demonstration of how decisions backed by life-cycle data shape real-world carbon outcomes and procurement decisions.
Manufacturers without verified data risk commercial exclusion and regulatory non-compliance.
Carbon transparency is becoming the new baseline in product specification — not just in the UK and Ireland, but across Europe. Manufacturers who embrace LCA and EPDs today position themselves as partners in climate performance. Those who don’t may find themselves left out of the next project, regulation — or market.
Data drives specification. It’s time to make sure your product is visible.