Scottish Landfill Ban exemption to apply to 2028

Construction & Demolition Waste 2 months ago

The Scottish Environment Protection Agency (SEPA) has announced that the Scottish landfill ban will now come into effect on 1 January 2028.
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layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 11 hours ago



Europe’s industrial decarbonisation is entering a delivery phase that will redefine sustainable construction. ABB’s contract to electrify SSAB’s new fossil‑free steel mill in Luleå confirms that green steel is progressing toward full-scale production. For contractors, it marks a shift in sustainable material specification and future procurement based on verified low embodied carbon materials. The advance aligns with industry commitments to net zero whole life carbon and demonstrates practical pathways for decarbonising the built environment.

The funding climate has hardened. bp’s withdrawal from its Teesside blue hydrogen project following a land dispute with a data centre operator underlines how digital infrastructure now competes directly with low carbon industry for grid access. This conflict intensifies pressure on resource efficiency in construction and signals that whole life carbon assessment will increasingly depend on electrification rather than offset‑based models. ExxonMobil’s retreat from low‑carbon spending reinforces tighter financing for hydrogen and carbon capture—technologies essential to reducing the embodied carbon of concrete and steel while maintaining lifecycle performance.

Policy movement, including the UK’s Critical Minerals Strategy 2035, seeks to secure resilient supply chains for renewable building materials and electrified systems such as switchgear, heat pumps and storage. These measures support life cycle thinking in construction and the circular economy, underpinning energy‑efficient buildings that meet BREEAM and future BREEAM v7 standards. The initiative responds to growing scrutiny of life cycle cost and carbon footprint reduction, linking sustainable building practices with long‑term infrastructure resilience.

Regulation is sharpening definitions of environmental sustainability in construction. The tightening oversight of biomass use, exemplified by the Drax pellet plant closure, forces more accurate lifecycle assessment and verification of environmental product declarations (EPDs) within building operations. This shift defines a new baseline for sustainable building design and eco‑design for buildings that target genuinely low carbon construction materials.

The UN’s first resolution on AI and the environment redirects attention to the environmental impact of construction-linked data infrastructure. Urban authorities are preparing stronger siting and performance frameworks, adding heat‑recovery obligations aligned with sustainable urban development and green infrastructure strategies.

The sector faces definitive choices. Builders who integrate whole life carbon principles, design for electrification, and plan around grid capacity will stay ahead. Effective adoption of sustainable design, circular construction strategies, and life cycle cost evaluation will distinguish those leading low carbon building transformation from those constrained by power or material shortages. The trajectory now favours verifiable green construction outcomes over aspirational promises.

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