Communities are the key to tackling plastic pollution

Environment Journal 9 months ago

A new paper developed through an interdisciplinary workshop advocates a fundamental change in how authorities treat the public within ecological campaigns. According to the National Oceanography Centre, policymakers need to move away from a top-down approach in which communities are…
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layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 3 hours ago



The establishment of the UK’s first Circular Construction Hub in Newham’s Royal Docks signals a structural commitment to sustainable construction and the circular economy in construction. Designed to mainstream the reuse and recycling of building materials, it supports the shift towards reducing embodied carbon and improving whole life carbon performance across projects. By embedding logistics, quality assurance and reliable supply chains, this initiative could advance circular construction strategies and demonstrate practical pathways for low embodied carbon materials and resource efficiency in construction. It represents a tangible framework for reducing the carbon footprint of construction while promoting low-impact construction methods and sustainable building practices.

Rising international pressure over plastic production underscores the importance of sustainable material specification and life cycle thinking in construction. With polymer-based products central to insulation and piping, the sector faces growing scrutiny on environmental sustainability in construction, particularly where lifecycle assessment and end-of-life reuse in construction can deliver measurable carbon footprint reduction. Emerging regulations could reshape procurement standards and accelerate demand for eco-design for buildings and verifiable environmental product declarations (EPDs).

The wider decarbonisation context adds urgency. UK greenhouse gas emissions have reached their lowest levels in 150 years, shifting focus to the embodied carbon in materials and the whole life carbon assessment of new developments. As operational energy declines through energy-efficient buildings and renewable infrastructure, embodied emissions tied to material choice and construction processes dominate the carbon footprint of new projects. Achieving net zero whole life carbon and delivering low carbon building solutions now depend on integrating digital traceability, design for disassembly and pre-demolition audits into every phase of building lifecycle performance.

Forward-looking firms adopting sustainable building design and green construction methods will gain resilience as regulation and investor expectations align around net zero carbon buildings and carbon neutral construction. The sector’s next competitive edge lies in optimising life cycle cost, enhancing sustainable urban development and embedding decarbonising the built environment principles into all projects. Waste becomes inventory when managed through circular economy models that sustain both environmental performance and long-term economic viability.

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