Urban construction has been a major contributor to carbon emissions. As China's housing demands decelerates, addressing the vacancy of residential buildings has become essential for revitalizing the real estate sector and promoting low-carbon and circular urban development. Here we show that China's housing vacancy rate within the available residential building stock may have exceeded 30% since 2021. We assess three strategies to transform excessive vacancy into an opportunity for carbon neutrality: (i) demand-side mitigation by housing vacancy rate reduction to slow down near-term carbon emissions, (ii) supply-side mitigation through the renovation of old residential buildings, and (iii) restricting demolition for sustained carbon reduction. These three strategies collectively yield superimposed carbon mitigation benefits: moderate implementation could reduce China's urban residential construction emissions by more than 43% over 2023-2060, meeting a 2 °C-compatible carbon budget under the Sustainability Shared Socioeconomic Pathways and offering a transferable framework for low-carbon, resource-efficient urban construction.
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Bing Xia
Jianzhuang Xiao
Gang Liu
Nature Communications
University of Manchester
Peking University
Hong Kong Polytechnic University
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Xia et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/68af432fad7bf08b1ead261b — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-62879-4