Overview of the Standard
The Whole Life Carbon Assessment (WLCA) standard is a professional guideline published by the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS) in September 2023, with an updated version effective from 1 July 2024. Authored by a multidisciplinary teamâincluding Simon Sturgis, Jane Anderson, Paul Astle and othersâthe document sets out a mandatory methodology for measuring and reporting carbon impacts of buildings and infrastructure throughout their life cycles. It aligns with European standards EN 15978, EN 17472 and EN 15804, and is intended for use by RICS members, architects, engineers and other builtâenvironment professionals.
Scope and Application
The standard applies to all types of construction, from new builds and retrofits to masterplans and fitâout projects. It covers every lifeâcycle stage (modules AâC) and also requires separate reporting of benefits and loads beyond the system boundary (module D). Specific guidance is provided for residential, commercial and infrastructure assets, with distinct reference periods (RSP) of 60 years for most projects and 120 years for large infrastructure.
Key Data Sources and Assumptions
Carbon data may be sourced from generic national factors, specific Environmental Product Declarations (EPDs), or collective sector datasets. Earlyâdesign assessments rely on generic data and benchmark values (e.g., default transport distances, waste rates and construction activity factors). As design progresses, the methodology mandates the use of projectâspecific EPDs where available, and outlines default contingency, carbonâdata and quantities uncertainty factors to manage risk.
Modules AâC: Carbon Flows Explained
- Module A (Upâfront carbon) captures rawâmaterial extraction, product manufacturing, transport to site and construction activities, including preâconstruction demolition (A5.1).
- Module B (Inâuse carbon) covers materialârelated emissions (B1), maintenance, repair, replacement (B2âB4), refurbishment (B5), operational energy (B6), water use (B7) and user activities (B8).
- Module C (Endâofâlife) records deconstruction, waste processing, transport and final disposal. Each module requires specific calculation formulas, default values (e.g., 5 % waste for inâsitu concrete, 35 kg COâe /m² for demolition) and guidance on handling biogenic carbon, carbonation and refrigerant fugitive emissions.
Reporting and Uncertainty Management
Assessors must apply a contingency factor (15 % in early design, 6 % in technical design, 0 % postâcompletion) and add carbonâdata and quantities uncertainty factors based on data quality scores. The combined percentage is added to all modules except B6âB8 to produce the final WLCA result. Detailed reporting templates for buildings and infrastructure ensure consistent presentation of upfront, embodied, operational and wholeâlife carbon figures.
Biogenic Carbon and Circular Economy
The standard differentiates between fossil, biogenic and landâuseâchange carbon. Sustainably sourced timber and other biomass receive a removal credit in modules A1âA3, balanced by emissions at endâofâlife. It also encourages circularâeconomy practices, such as reusing formwork (default three uses) and accounting for recycling or energy recovery in module D.
Decarbonisation Scenarios
Two decarbonisation pathways are required: one assuming current grid emissions and another incorporating future grid decarbonisation (e.g., UK National Gridâs âfallâshortâ scenario). Materialâdecabonisation assumptions are also defined, with specific percentages applied to modules B5, C1âC2 and D1 over the RSP.
Supporting Materials and Further Reading
The publication includes extensive appendices covering metadata, acknowledgements, detailed material specifications, default transport scenarios, waste rates, carbonâdata quality matrices and guidance on using BIM, CIBSE TM65 and other tools. Links to the full PDF and additional RICS resources are provided for deeper exploration.
Impact for Sustainable Housing in Europe
For a panâEuropean audience focused on sustainable housing, this standard offers a harmonised, rigorous framework to quantify and compare carbon performance across diverse building typologies and regulatory contexts. By mandating fullâlifeâcycle accounting, uncertainty transparency and alignment with EUâwide standards, it supports the development of lowâcarbon homes, facilitates benchmarking, and underpins policy targets such as the EUâs Renovation Wave and netâzero building goals.

