In August, the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) released the first chapter of its Sixth Assessment Report (AR6). With input from hundreds of thousands of scientists, the report is widely considered the authority on the future of climate change. This fall, Autodesk will be participating in COP26, the annual UN climate change summit. It’s an opportunity for policymakers and partners to come together to reach agreements on how to tackle climate change. The data provided in AR6 will largely steer those conversations. At Autodesk, we have long heeded insights from the IPCC and applied learnings to our own Impact Strategy. Our takeaway this year is that consensus amongst scientists is clearer than ever. Society must take immediate action to reduce the catastrophic effects of climate change. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yzmTNoiOtiY Here’s the unsettling news: the report makes it clear the world has locked in a certain amount of climate change. The greenhouse gases already present in the atmosphere last for years. Even if everyone brought emissions to a screeching halt today, the heat of the excess energy stored in our oceans would continue warming the Earth’s average surface temperature for decades. The changes caused by past and future greenhouse gas emissions will be irreversible for centuries, if not millennia. Continuing our current trajectory will mean a future no one wants to imagine. But there is good news here, too. There are pathways available today that could help avoid the worst consequences of climate change. But each of us must act now, globally and aggressively—across business, across industries, and across governments. Reducing the impact of the built environment is mission-critical The built environment contributes 40% of greenhouse gas emissions globally. That figure includes more than just the energy it takes to operate buildings. It also includes embodied carbon, or the emissions from construction and the manufacture and transport of building materials and supplies. Digitalization of the architecture, engineering, and construction (AEC) industry offers great opportunity to change this trajectory. The benefits of 3D building information modeling (BIM) extend our ability to design a project in rich detail with insights to help improve the energy, carbon, and structural performance of a building’s design.

A digital twin for AEC is a dynamic, up-to-date replica of a physical asset or set of assets—whether it’s a building, a campus, a city, or a railway—that brings together design, construction, and operational data.

A modern, ‘smart’ apartment complex is constructed.
Acting now to change the future
The world still has the chance to avoid the 1.5°C and 2°C increase projected by the IPCC. But everyone needs to drastically eliminate greenhouse gas emissions now—this decade. We were one of the first companies to set science-based greenhouse gas reduction goals. Now we’ve attained net zero and we’re doubling down with even more ambitious targets that help keep us in line with the IPCC’s recommendations. We will continue to follow the findings of the IPCC as it releases additional chapters to the AR6 and evolve our Impact Strategy accordingly, just as we have for over a decade. But large-scale change requires industry partnership and collaboration across sectors. That’s why a central part of our Impact Strategy is partnering with our customers to help catalyze their sustainability journeys. We don’t just hand them technology—we enable them to build innovation strategies that meet their business objectives including carbon reduction. By harnessing data, automation, and insights, companies are finding sustainability goals can align with their business goals.
This chapter of the IPCC report underscores the message we’ve been hearing from our customers: this work is more important and urgent than ever before.