The UN Environment Programme’s International Methane Emissions Observatory (IMEO) manages the Oil and Gas Methane Partnership 2.0 (OGMP 2.0). Through the partnership, OGMP 2.0 member companies commit to measuring and reporting methane emissions from their activities across the supply chain, forming a robust, empirical basis for understanding methane emissions and progress towards mitigation targets. Initially co-designed by industry and regulators, OGMP 2.0 has more than doubled its membership since launching in November 2020. It is increasingly recognised as the world’s leading Measurement/Monitoring, Reporting and Verification1 (MRV) for the oil and gas industry. A growing number of countries are demonstrating interest in using the OGMP 2.0 framework as the foundation for related methane policies and regulations. This paper offers policymakers a guide to building OGMP 2.0-aligned reporting into the MRV component of these regulations.
The global construction sector is transitioning from ambition to measurable delivery, with sustainable construction becoming integral to both policy and practice. The UK–Japan investment partnership underscores this evolution through targeted funding for offshore wind and nuclear power, recognising that grid networks must modernise in tandem with clean generation. These efforts strengthen energy security while advancing decarbonising the built environment and reducing the carbon footprint of construction across its entire value chain.
Across Britain, solar installations on public estates are embedding renewable generation into everyday infrastructure, showing that energy-efficient buildings are no longer aspirational but fundamental to sustainable urban development. Analysts argue that redirecting fossil-fuel subsidies towards sustainable building design could accelerate progress toward net zero whole life carbon targets and reduce the whole life carbon impact of civic assets. This reinforces the need for whole life carbon assessment and lifecycle assessment in all public projects, ensuring transparency in life cycle cost, embodied carbon, and end-of-life reuse in construction.
The industry’s digital transformation is driving resource efficiency in construction, as platforms such as Digital Construction Week highlight the potential of data-driven eco-design for buildings. Organisations adopting circular economy in construction models report improved building lifecycle performance and measurable reductions in embodied carbon in materials. Certification frameworks like BREEAM and BREEAM v7 are embedding quantifiable environmental sustainability in construction, linking design intent to operational carbon outcomes.
A coherent policy environment that favours sustainable material specification, low carbon construction materials, and green building products is essential to achieving carbon neutral construction. Governments and developers are increasingly evaluating low embodied carbon materials through environmental product declarations (EPDs) and promoting circular construction strategies that minimise waste and encourage reuse within a circular economy. The emphasis on low-impact construction and green infrastructure is reshaping how cities grow, supporting sustainable architecture and eco-friendly construction as standard.
Across the built environment, professionals are converging on a shared goal: to deliver net zero carbon buildings through sustainable design and life cycle thinking in construction. The sector is shifting from promise to performance, embracing sustainable building practices that reduce embodied carbon, support carbon footprint reduction, and enable the creation of greener, more resilient infrastructure for future generations.
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