3️⃣ facts about queen bees that shape bee dynamics:
🐝The queen’s job is to lay the eggs that will spawn the hive’s next generation of bees.
🐝If the queen dies, workers will create a new queen by feeding one of the female larvae an exclusive diet of a food called “royal jelly.” This elixir enables the worker bee to develop into a fertile queen.
🐝Queens regulate the hive’s activities by producing chemicals that guide the behavior of the other bees.
Bees are fascinating. But did you know that birds, bats, butterflies, beetles, and other small mammals are also pollinators?🦇🐦🐞🦋
Pollinators are vital for our planet and our food security. That’s why The EU biodiversity strategy for 2030 and the EU Pollinators Initiative set the commitment to protect wild pollinators, and to stop and reverse their decline.
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The regeneration of Sighthill in Glasgow is moving forward at scale, led by Keepmoat, with hundreds of new energy‑efficient homes and major infrastructure improvements. The scheme highlights sustainable urban development in practice, with strong focus on community links, job creation and low carbon building standards. Delivering housing with reduced Whole Life Carbon is central to driving environmental sustainability in construction across the UK.
In Glastonbury, Beard Construction has started work on the adaptive reuse of Baily’s Buildings, a former industrial site. The approach of retrofitting existing structures demonstrates how Embodied Carbon reduction can be achieved while preserving historic character. The project reflects rising demand for sustainable building design that aligns with Circular Economy in construction principles, lowering the carbon footprint of construction while providing long‑term Life Cycle Cost savings.
Across Europe, climate risks are shifting priorities. Extreme heat and flooding are disrupting construction schedules and damaging materials, with economic costs projected to reach billions. The sector faces mounting pressure for climate‑resilient and sustainable design solutions. Adopting eco‑design for buildings, low carbon construction materials and lifecycle assessment frameworks will be essential to enhance building lifecycle performance and safeguard investment resilience.
Global demand for air conditioning is exposing the urgent need for low carbon design. Without radical improvements in passive cooling, natural ventilation and insulation standards, energy‑efficient buildings risk being undermined by runaway emissions. Transitioning to net zero carbon buildings requires both technological innovation and a holistic Whole Life Carbon Assessment to secure carbon footprint reduction across the building lifecycle.
Digitalisation is also influencing sustainable construction pathways. Veolia’s launch of its North American Hubgrade Centre, while focused on utilities, signals the integration of data‑driven tools into sustainable building practices. Such systems have clear relevance for resource efficiency in construction, enabling improved environmental product declarations (EPDs), energy optimisation and smarter circular construction strategies.
Public investment is increasingly underpinning decarbonising the built environment. The UK’s Great British Energy initiative will fund new renewable infrastructure to support carbon neutral construction and net zero Whole Life Carbon goals. Affordable clean energy strengthens the ecosystem for eco‑friendly construction and sustainable material specification, ensuring the next generation of green construction projects can thrive economically while reducing the environmental impact of construction.
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