NHBC Foundation: Managing construction in a changing climate

Planning, Building & Construction Today 21 days ago

The NHBC Foundation discusses their reports and progress into researching and informing construction and climate change
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layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 3 hours ago



A decisive shift in sustainable construction is unfolding as carbon‑storing technologies move from demonstration to deployment. The first commercial floor slab with embedded carbon sequestration from Germany demonstrates a measurable cut in embodied carbon and signals that green construction materials can now contribute directly to net zero whole life carbon goals. The integration of renewable building materials into structural concrete marks a step toward low carbon design and provides new data for whole life carbon assessment and lifecycle assessment benchmarks.

Supply chains are redefining themselves around environmental sustainability in construction. SFS UK’s expansion of its technical capability to accelerate low carbon building systems reflects how sustainable building practices are increasingly central to decarbonising the built environment. The drive to cut the carbon footprint of construction is making both resource efficiency in construction and the specification of low embodied carbon materials non‑negotiable for every sustainable building design.

The release of the Future Homes Standard is aligning market and policy signals. Uptake of RIBA‑endorsed training shows a surge in professional demand for sustainable design skills and life cycle thinking in construction. Innovate UK’s £3.7 million investment in construction skills reinforces that a transition to energy‑efficient buildings depends not only on technology but also on workforce competence. Cost pressure remains acute, with smaller contractors facing liquidity challenges that affect whole‑life carbon performance and life cycle cost planning.

Private finance appears uncertain. BP’s scaled‑back investment in national carbon‑capture ventures illustrates the risk of slowing momentum in net zero carbon buildings just as the industry’s need for carbon neutral construction peaks. The reported decline in low‑carbon spending by large energy firms may hinder circular economy innovation, yet new partnerships linking EV‑charging hubs, battery storage, and building networks show that eco‑design for buildings is converging with green infrastructure. These integrations exemplify circular economy in construction principles and strengthen the foundation for BREEAM V7 certification and broader sustainable urban development goals.

The sector’s next challenge is not proof of technical feasibility but measurable proof of commitment, guided by accurate environmental product declarations (EPDs), comprehensive whole life carbon analysis, and transparent reporting of embodied carbon in materials. Real progress toward low‑impact construction, end‑of‑life reuse in construction, and circular construction strategies will determine whether the promise of net zero whole life carbon becomes standard practice across the built environment.

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