Spatial Patterns of Energy-Related Carbon Emissions from Residential Land: A Hybrid Physics–Machine-Learning Study of Shenzhen
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Accurate estimation of residential building energy consumption and associated CO2 emissions is essential for refined urban carbon management. This study develops a hybrid framework that integrates physics-based simulation and machine learning to estimate residential building energy use and energy-related CO2 emissions in Shenzhen in 2020. Representative building archetypes were first simulated and then used to train machine-learning models for large-scale applications. Building-level energy estimates were further combined with a bottom-up inventory to generate high-spatiotemporal-resolution maps of residential CO2 emissions. The results show that: (1) the selected model achieved good accuracy and temporal robustness, with strong agreement between estimated and reference energy use at daily, monthly, and annual scales; (2) residential energy use was primarily driven by meteorological conditions, especially daily mean temperature and the duration of high-temperature conditions, and exhibited clear weekly and seasonal patterns, with higher values on weekends and in summer; (3) residential CO2 emissions in Shenzhen reflected the combined effects of scale and intensity, with Longgang and Bao’an contributing the largest total emissions, Self-built residential buildings contributing the largest aggregate emissions, and Old residential buildings showing the highest average emissions per building; (4) emissions were highly concentrated in a small number of high-emission buildings, which were more frequently distributed along road-adjacent block perimeters. Overall, the proposed framework improves the fine-scale characterization of residential building CO2 emissions and provides a useful basis for hotspot identification and targeted mitigation.