💧 Clean and healthy water for all Europeans — that's our goal. Today,...

EU Environment and Planet 2 hours ago

💧 Clean and healthy water for all Europeans — that's our goal. Today, new and stronger protection rules for surface water and groundwater in the EU are entering into force. What changes? 🔹 New harmful substances are now covered, including certain PFAS “forever chemicals” (such as TFA), pesticides and pharmaceuticals. 🔹 For the first time, the rules also address microplastics, antimicrobial resistance indicators and sensitive groundwater ecosystems. 🔹 Smarter monitoring tools and streamlined digital reporting will help reduce administrative burden for EU countries. 🔹 New “effect-based monitoring” will assess the combined impact of pollutants on water quality – giving a more complete picture of risks to people and ecosystems. This is about more than pollution control. It is an investment in Europe’s water resilience, public health and long-term competitiveness.

layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 7 hours ago



Sustainable construction is entering a results‑driven stage defined by regulation, verifiable data, and measurable reductions in the carbon footprint of construction. The UN Global Status Report for Buildings and Construction highlights that the sector, which generates almost forty per cent of global CO₂ emissions, is beginning to reduce its overall energy demand through Whole Life Carbon Assessment, low embodied carbon materials, and advanced retrofit strategies. Governments facing the environmental impact of construction are tightening performance codes and linking finance to proven carbon footprint reduction, transforming sustainability from aspiration into obligation.

Innovation in materials is accelerating, with green concrete, renewable building materials, and circular construction strategies demonstrating commercial viability. Embodied carbon in materials is now a primary metric for procurement, supported by environmental product declarations (EPDs) and life cycle thinking in construction. The shift towards eco‑friendly construction is reinforcing the growth of energy‑efficient buildings and low carbon building solutions benchmarked using BREEAM and the forthcoming BREEAM v7 standard.

Across Europe and Asia, scalable production of low carbon construction materials is enabling the expansion of net zero carbon buildings and sustainable building practices. Developers are adopting whole life carbon analysis and life cycle cost reviews to ensure resource efficiency in construction and achieve compliance with net zero whole life carbon frameworks. Sustainable building design now merges ecological restoration and flood resilience within green infrastructure programmes, reflecting sustainable urban development as a form of ecosystem engineering.

The trajectory of the built environment is clear: decarbonising the built environment demands carbon neutral construction, circular economy in construction planning, and transparent sustainable material specification throughout the design process. The focus on building lifecycle performance embeds environmental sustainability in construction as a fixed criterion for investment, underpinning a shift towards a verifiable, low carbon future for global green construction.

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