

Bentley Systems (BSY), the infrastructure engineering software company, announced at COP27 expanded integrated workflows for embodied carbon calculation in the Bentley iTwin platform.
The new integration enables carbon assessment in infrastructure digital twin solutions, empowered by the Embodied Carbon in Construction Calculator (EC3).
Developed by the nonprofit Building Transparency, EC3 is a no-cost, open-access tool that allows benchmarking, assessment, and reductions in embodied carbon, focused on the upfront supply chain emissions of construction materials.
Building Transparency provides the education, resources, and tools – including EC3 – to address embodied carbon’s role in cli-mate change.
The EC3 tool and its subsequent effect on the industry are driving demand for low-carbon solutions and incentivizing construction material manufacturers and suppliers to invest in disclosure, transparency, and material innovations that reduce the carbon emis-sions of their products.
The EC3 integration allows Bentley’s infrastructure digital twin solutions, powered by iTwin, and third-party applications built on the Bentley iTwin platform, to simplify and accelerate the generation of carbon reporting and insights based on the no-cost, open-source EC3 carbon database and calculator.
The Bentley iTwin platform is an open, scalable, platform-as-a-service offering that enables developers to create and bring to mar-ket solutions that solve real infrastructure problems by leveraging digital twins.
Designers and sustainability engineers in the architectural, engineering, and construction industry spend a significant amount of time assessing or reporting on the environmental footprint of infrastructure projects, mainly when manually exporting and aggregat-ing data from quantity counts and bills of materials. It can also be error-prone, requiring additional verification of successful inges-tion by carbon tools.
Moreover, AEC professionals do not want to be locked into one single carbon calculator as different calculators may provide differ-ent results (for instance, due to uncertainties in environmental product declarations), and carbon reporting and certification require-ments differ as a function of the project, country, or infrastructure owner.
The added integration with EC3 not only creates time savings with improved accuracy but also provides uncertainty estimations of the EPD data and increases carbon transparency due to Building Transparency’s open-source/open-access strategy.
Users can incorporate engineering data created by various design tools into a single view using the Bentley iTwin platform, gener-ate a unified report of materials and quantities, and share it with different carbon analysis tools – now also with EC3 – via cloud syn-chronisation.
One of the mutual users interested in this new integration is WSP, applying both the EC3 database and the Bentley iTwin platform on infrastructure projects such as the Interstate Bridge Replacement program.