*Han-Hui Chen (Ph.D. candidate of the Department of Land Economics at National Chengchi University)
Chen-Yi Sun (Professor of the Department of Land Economics at National Chengchi University.)
Huang Yu-Tong (Master's degree of the Department of Land Economics at National Chengchi University.)
Taiwan's green building assessment system (Ecology, Energy Saving, Waste Reduction, and Health, EEWH) is the fourth globally to officially implement green building certification and the first to develop green building standards with a focus on subtropical energy efficiency. In response to the global net-zero movement, the Taiwanese government is actively advancing low-carbon building assessments and green building certification policies. In 2022, it announced the "Taiwan 2050 Net-Zero Emissions Policy Pathway Blueprint," which establishes corresponding green building labels for various building types as part of the sector's response strategy.
From the perspective of sustainable development responsibilities, it is more urgent for large-scale residential buildings to apply for green building certification than for general building types, demanding more stringent evaluation standards. This study aims to establish comprehensive evaluation criteria and promotion policies for large residential buildings seeking green building certification, enhancing the current EEWH-RS (Residential) assessment criteria in Taiwan. Through expert interviews and questionnaire analysis, the research seeks to optimize the design of current green building certification evaluation criteria, increasing policy acceptance and implementation effectiveness. This effort aims to achieve the "2050 Net-Zero Emissions" goal through the "Net-Zero Building Pathway Planning"