Urban investor NREP has announced plans to build the world’s first net zero logistics facility which will reach net zero across operational and embodied carbon without external off-setting.

The net zero shed

The Net Zero Shed

The asset will be built in Bålsta, 50 km outside Stockholm, Sweden. Embodied carbon has been designed out from each element of the 20,000 m2 building, and the carbon neutrality will be achieved during the building’s lifecycle:

The project is the first of three ‘earthshot’ projects launched by NREP – the second being a residential development and the third an office retrofit – that will act as learning labs as NREP advances towards its ambitious target of becoming 100% carbon neutral by 2028, without external offsets.

Claus Mathisen, CEO of NREP, said: 'We have collaborated with the industry’s leading innovators to push new boundaries and deliver the world’s greenest logistics development. Drawing from the most advanced products available, this project will be a test bed for emerging solutions, creating a whole new, commercially viable paradigm in carbon neutral real estate.

'This project is a great example of how to convert insights into real actions, now. And it demonstrates that doing the right thing is also good business. A property like this one will attract better financing and more customers.

'As a business, we believe decarbonising is a superior business approach. This prototype shows what is already possible today, and we hope that others will soon follow, enabling the scale-up of green solutions and bringing down costs.'

In a first for a logistics property, low-carbon materials will create reduction potential of circa 60% compared to typical logistics buildings. The biggest reduction levers lay in the structure of the roof and walls, adding up to half of the CO2 reduction.

The team will replace traditional steel walls and roofs with a cross-laminated timber structure and façade. This will be coupled with a new type of organic insulation that binds more CO2 than it emits during the production process.

At the foundation, NREP will use green cement which enables circa 30% CO2 reduction compared to a typical warehouse foundation.

To reach net-zero the team includes the carbon sink qualities of timber and other organic materials. Lifetime CO2 emissions are brought down with a disassembly design principle, ensuring a high re-use factor of biogenic materials, preventing CO2 from escaping into the atmosphere by end of life.

Net zero operational carbon will be achieved by utilising 100% renewable green electricity. During the operational phase, there is a potential to become energy positive, according to the firm, using bespoke solar, heat pump and battery storage solutions to return surplus energy back to the grid.