The cNCAP MENA methodology provides a structured approach, starting with a thorough assessment of the current cooling landscape, including demand patterns, existing technologies, policy frameworks, and market dynamics. This assessment phase, crucial for understanding country-specific challenges and opportunities, is followed by a strategic planning phase where countries can set ambitious, yet achievable, targets for sustainable cooling. The methodology guides the identification of key interventions, policy instruments, and financial mechanisms needed to achieve these targets. Finally, it outlines an implementation framework, emphasizing stakeholder engagement, capacity building, and robust monitoring and evaluation. By following this adaptive framework, countries can ensure their NCAPs are not only technically sound but also politically feasible and economically viable, fostering a just transition to sustainable cooling.
The UK’s decision to align its chemicals regulation with the EU has given the construction sector a stable framework crucial for sustainable construction and sustainable building design. By clarifying the approval process for low carbon construction materials and renewable building materials, the move strengthens environmental sustainability in construction and supports the shift towards low carbon design and Whole Life Carbon Assessment.
Such regulation underpins the creation of net zero carbon buildings and accelerates the sector’s transition to net zero Whole Life Carbon through stronger control of embodied carbon in materials.
Government backing of decarbonisation through the £470 million support package for ceramics and chemical factories signals a clear link between industrial policy and the wider Circular Economy in construction. This funding encourages manufacturers to deliver green building materials and eco-friendly construction products with lower embodied carbon, reducing the overall carbon footprint of construction.
These developments mark a decisive move toward resource efficiency in construction, end-of-life reuse in construction, and life cycle thinking in construction. Cheap gas no longer dictates design decisions; carbon metrics now govern value, feasibility, and compliance. Green construction is evolving into carbon neutral construction, where lifecycle assessment and whole life carbon strategies define competitive advantage. The direction of travel is clear—the UK’s sustainable construction landscape now integrates sustainable material specification, circular construction strategies, and eco-design for buildings as central to delivery. Sustainability is not an adjunct but the organising principle shaping the environmental impact of construction and the decarbonising of the built environment.
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