'A new standard for corporate responsibility': European Parliament approves new supply chain sustainability rules

Business Green 2 years ago

MEPs back Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive requiring large firms to take steps to guard against environmental and human rights violations in their supply chains
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layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 2 hours ago



A surge in regulatory focus and material innovation is realigning sustainable construction with measurable outcomes. Advances in fire protection for cross-laminated timber are addressing long‑standing barriers to its wider use in mid‑ and high‑rise projects, reducing the embodied carbon in materials while improving safety performance. As whole life carbon assessment becomes central to procurement and design, engineered timber is emerging as a key component of low carbon building strategies aimed at achieving net zero whole life carbon outcomes.

Natural England’s nature recovery plan demonstrates a shift in policy towards environmental sustainability in construction by integrating green infrastructure and ecological resilience into national planning frameworks. This alignment supports sustainable urban development that balances economic growth with resource efficiency in construction, underpinning a more accountable approach to the environmental impact of construction.

Private investment is beginning to parallel policy ambition. Enfinium’s proposal to implement carbon capture at its Parc Adfer energy‑from‑waste plant represents a step towards decarbonising the built environment. Such projects indicate a move from compliance to proactive carbon footprint reduction and support life cycle cost thinking in construction by addressing emissions across the full operational and material spectrum.

In Salford, approval of the £1.3 billion Regent Park redevelopment highlights how low carbon design principles and sustainable building practices are shaping real estate investment. The scheme exemplifies eco‑design for buildings that integrate renewable building materials and energy‑efficient buildings into commercially viable frameworks.

Professional bodies are reinforcing these trends. Collaboration between RICS and the UK Regulators Network signals a systemic effort to embed whole life carbon, lifecycle assessment and environmental product declarations (EPDs) into asset valuation and planning. The approach redefines sustainable material specification and circular construction strategies as fundamental financial tools rather than optional design features.

Across the sector, sustainable building design is being quantified through whole life carbon metrics that link life cycle cost with circular economy performance. The shift towards net zero carbon buildings and carbon neutral construction confirms that the future of green construction lies in verifiable data and continuous optimisation of building lifecycle performance rather than reputational aspiration.

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Whole Life Carbon is a platform for the entire construction industry—both in the UK and internationally. We track the latest publications, debates, and events related to whole life guidance and sustainability. If you have any enquiries or opinions to share, please do get in touch.