The shift to LED lighting is stopping us from seeing our night skies

New Scientist 2 years ago

From an energy perspective, the move away from sodium vapour lamps to LEDs is great, but the news isn't so good when it comes to light pollution. The way we illuminate the world needs to be part of our green agenda, says Chanda Prescod-Weinstein
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layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 4 hours ago



The past two weeks have marked a substantial evolution in sustainable construction, with regulatory and commercial forces converging to embed environmental sustainability in construction practice. The UK government's Environmental Improvement Plan outlines a framework linking whole life carbon assessment with biodiversity restoration, air quality improvement, and mitigation of PFAS contamination. Its success will depend on enforceable regulation that translates life cycle thinking in construction into measurable performance standards.

Greenshank Environmental’s launch of a Biodiversity Net Gain credits platform strengthens the alignment of sustainable building design and eco-design for buildings with quantifiable outcomes. The platform enables developers to integrate lifecycle assessment metrics into project planning, ensuring that environmental product declarations (EPDs) and sustainable building practices become core compliance measures. This shift reflects mounting demand for green infrastructure that delivers measurable ecological value and supports net zero whole life carbon targets.

Holcim UK’s acquisition of Thames Materials underscores the industry’s transition toward a circular economy in construction. The move expands capacity for recycling construction waste, reinforcing circular construction strategies that reduce the embodied carbon in materials and promote low carbon construction materials reuse. By embedding resource efficiency in construction supply chains, the firm is pivoting toward a model of whole life carbon accountability and end-of-life reuse in construction—a hallmark of low-impact construction.

The EU’s forthcoming deforestation regulation exposes the tension between sustainable material specification and trade dependency. Developers sourcing timber or composite materials face growing pressure to verify the carbon footprint of construction inputs and apply life cycle cost principles to procurement. The policy’s implementation will test how far the sector is willing to enforce carbon footprint reduction while maintaining supply stability across borders.

These developments chart a decisive move from voluntary sustainability commitments to systemic change anchored in carbon neutral construction and decarbonising the built environment. The industry’s capacity to deliver net zero carbon buildings, apply BREEAM and forthcoming BREEAM v7 standards, and demonstrate building lifecycle performance will determine its credibility. Sustainable design must now integrate low carbon design, whole life carbon evaluation, and renewable building materials as standard practice in achieving sustainable urban development and resilient, energy-efficient buildings.

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