📊 The Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) has published its latest monthly Climate Bulletin, focusing on key climate trends in January 2026.
🌡️ The bulletin reports that January 2026 was the fifth-warmest January globally, with an average surface air temperature of 12.95 °C, which is 1.47 °C warmer than the estimated pre-industrial level (1850–1900).
🛰️ This data visualisation, produced using C3S data, shows surface air temperature anomalies across the Northern Hemisphere for January 2026.
Warmer-than-average conditions are visible across large parts of the Arctic, including Greenland and the Canadian Arctic Archipelago, with anomalies locally exceeding +7 °C.
In contrast, colder-than-average conditions prevailed over northern and eastern Europe, linked to severe cold outbreaks which affected the area during the second half of the month.
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The UK’s binding Seventh Carbon Budget compels an 87% emissions reduction by 2042, accelerating the shift toward sustainable construction and low carbon design across the built environment. This legislative benchmark anchors a decisive move toward net zero Whole Life Carbon outcomes and intensifies the role of Whole Life Carbon Assessment and embodied carbon measurement in planning approvals and project delivery.
The closure of blast furnaces at Port Talbot symbolises the transition to low embodied carbon materials and green steel production, defining the next phase of carbon neutral construction and circular economy practices within heavy industry.
Rising global commitments to electrify 35% of energy use by 2035 redefine expectations for energy-efficient buildings and sustainable building design. Developers now integrate lifecycle assessment, life cycle thinking in construction, and Life Cycle Cost evaluation to ensure resource efficiency in construction and to meet BREEAM and BREEAM v7 performance standards. Buildings are being conceived as active participants in the grid through low carbon construction materials, renewable building materials, and eco-design for buildings that prioritise reduced embodied carbon in materials and enhanced building lifecycle performance.
The UK’s nature investment blueprint, valuing ecological resilience at up to £1 trillion, underscores the economic logic driving environmental sustainability in construction. These initiatives expand sustainable building practices, circular economy in construction, and end-of-life reuse in construction as industry norms. Amplified by the social imperative of a just transition, decarbonising the built environment now relies on sustainable material specification, environmental product declarations (EPDs), and circular construction strategies that prevent inequality while lowering the carbon footprint of construction.
As heatwaves and wildfire risks intensify, green construction and eco‑friendly construction are recast not as branding but as survival strategies reinforcing the environmental impact mitigation central to sustainable architecture and sustainable urban development. The convergence of whole life carbon accountability, renewable energy integration, and green infrastructure investment confirms that net zero carbon buildings are emerging as both ethical and economic necessities for the global construction sector.
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