Identifying Public Policies to Promote Sustainable Building: A Proposal for Governmental Drivers Based on Stakeholder Perceptions
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Díaz López, Carmen; Navarro Galera, Andrés; Zamorano Toro, Montserrat; Buendía Carrillo, DionisioEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Tax drivers Financial drivers Government intervention drivers Sustainable building Stakeholders Sustainable development objectives
Date
2021Referencia bibliográfica
Díaz-López, C.; Navarro-Galera, A.; Zamorano, M.; Buendía-Carrillo, D. Identifying Public Policies to Promote Sustainable Building: A Proposal for Governmental Drivers Based on Stakeholder Perceptions. Sustainability 2021, 13, 7701. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13147701
Patrocinador
ERDF project with reference B1-SEJ-217- UGR18; Department of Economic Transformation, Industry, Knowledge and Universities (Regional Government of Andalusia); Technologies for Circular Economy of the University of Granada - Research group TEP-968Résumé
In recent years, research findings and pronouncements by international organisations have
recognised the usefulness and timeliness of advancing public policies to promote sustainable building.
However, in many parts of the world, governmental measures have limited their scope mainly to
energy efficiency in housing use. In the same vein, some experiences in different countries have
revealed the need to study further governmental or stimulation drivers that can boost sustainability in
building, renovation, and dwellings. This paper aims to contribute to the design of public policies that
promote sustainable building. Our paper seeks to identify specific drivers that can help governments
boost sustainability in building, renovation, and dwellings through a multi-stakeholder survey. Our
findings show the specific drivers to be of three types: fiscal, financial, and government interventions.
It is the respondents’ opinion that public policies can help promote sustainable housing. Financial
drivers are the most highly rated, followed by fiscal drivers and then government interventions.