Beyond the Carbon Blind Spot — Embodied Carbon and Scope 3 Emissions in the Commercial Property Sector on the Chinese Mainland
- Written by Media Outreach
HONG KONG SAR - Media OutReach Newswire - 22 April 2026 - Cushman & Wakefield, a leading global real estate services firm, today released its annual Beyond the Carbon Blind Spot – Embodied Carbon and Scope 3 Emissions in the Commercial Property Sector on the Chinese Mainland, a landmark report highlighting the growing importance of whole-life carbon in shaping the future of real estate investment, development, and asset performance. 

What is Embodied Carbon?Scope 1, 2 and 3 Emissions in Commercial Real EstateShanghai – The Average Green Grade A Office Rental Compared to the Average Non-Green Grade A Office Rental (Q4 2015-Q1 2026)Source: Cushman & Wakefield Research
The report finds that while operational energy efficiency has improved significantly across the sector, embodied carbon and Scope 3 emissions now represent the majority of total lifecycle emissions in many commercial buildings. A Shift to Whole-Life Carbon Thinking As building efficiency improves and electricity grids decarbonise, the relative importance of embodied carbon is increasing. The report highlights the "redevelopment paradox": while new buildings are more energy efficient, demolition and reconstruction can generate such high upfront carbon that total lifecycle emissions may exceed those of retained and refurbished assets. This shift is particularly relevant in rapidly evolving urban markets such as Shanghai, Beijing, Shenzhen, and Guangzhou, where redevelopment cycles are frequent and asset repositioning is common. Scope 3 Becomes a Core Market Driver Scope 3 emissions – covering embodied carbon, tenant energy use, and supply chain activities – are now the largest emissions category for most real estate portfolios. The report shows that leased office space is increasingly a key Scope 3 exposure point for occupiers, especially multinational companies operating under global net-zero commitments. As a result, Scope 3 performance is now influencing: - Leasing decisions and tenant demand
- Capital allocation and ESG investment screening
- Access to green finance
- Corporate disclosure and benchmarking frameworks
- Rental performance and occupancy resilience
- Operating costs and capital expenditure requirements
- Exit yields and investor demand
- Adaptive reuse and retrofit-first strategies
- Low-carbon materials and construction innovation
- Supply chain engagement and procurement reform
- Green leasing and tenant collaboration
- Improved carbon data and governance frameworks

