Your home stores carbon for decades

Forests aren’t the only carbon sinks

a house built of wood
An average house can store almost a hundred metric tons of carbon. Public domain image.

Wood is infinitely useful. Look around, and you’ll find it in all sorts of places, from cardboard boxes to pianos. It is even used in some frames for bikes and cars. If you live in the U.S., wood was also likely used to build your home. All these wood-based items are valuable to people in their own way. They also help reduce the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere by storing carbon.

The wood used in people’s houses may be particularly important when it comes to storing carbon. According to a new Southern Research Station study, the wood used to build and maintain houses will continue to store large amounts of carbon for the next 50 years.

“As trees grow, they pull carbon from the atmosphere and the soil. When trees are harvested to make products like lumber for homes, some of that carbon continues to be stored,” says Jeff Prestemon, lead author of the study and SRS research economist.

Even after the wood used in buildings reaches the end of its useful life and ends up in a landfill, it does not immediately release its carbon. It continues to store that carbon for many years. In this way, wood retains its storage capacity for several more decades.

a house under construction
Even if the number of new homes declines in the future, the amount of carbon stored in wood products is likely to increase. Public domain image.

Between initial building and repairs, one average house can store almost a hundred metric tons of carbon. And in the U.S., where more than 90% of new single-family homes are built with wood, the carbon stored in homes quickly adds up.

Houses store so much carbon that figuring out how many will be built in the future is important for understanding the total U.S. carbon storage capacity.

“The wood used to build houses will remain an increasing, significant component of the overall forest carbon sink – regardless of whether the U.S. population grows or shrinks, and regardless of high or low economic growth,” says Prestemon.

The researchers examined how population growth and income can project the number of new homes that may be built in the future.

“It is likely that fewer homes will be built in the coming decades,” says Prestemon. “However, existing homes will need repairs and renovations, which require wood. Our research suggests that even if new home construction declines, the amount of carbon stored in wood products will increase.”

This story was originally published as a Forest Service Feature Story

Read the full text of the study. 

For more information, email Jeff Prestemon at jeff.prestemon@usda.gov.

Access the latest publications by SRS scientists.