A little extra good news this week! Paraíso de Ballenas is a project...

Future Earth 14 days ago

A little extra good news this week! Paraíso de Ballenas is a project collecting plastic waste from remote beaches and Afro-Colombian communities along the coast of Buenaventura. This part of Colombia’s central Pacific coast is home to humpback whales and extensive mangrove forests. In the mangroves, plastic pollution can reach up to 236 items per square meter, suffocating the roots. Plastic pollution is also carried out to the ocean and ingested by marine life. Humpback whales are estimated to ingest 200,000 pieces of microplastic every day. So far, the project has recovered 16,534 lbs of plastic waste and is on track to recover 1.3 million lbs by 2030. Paraíso de Ballenas is a partnership between Fundación Magüipi, rePurpose, and The Saie Climate Initiative. Source: WHALE’S PARADISE with The Saie Climate Initiative | The Saie Way – Ep: 008

layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 1 day ago



The United Nations COP30 summit in Brazil has amplified global scrutiny of environmental sustainability in construction, accelerating the industry’s alignment with climate imperatives. The UK Environmental Audit Committee’s drive to integrate whole life carbon assessment into the planning system, supported by the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors, marks a significant shift toward measuring embodied carbon throughout the entire project lifecycle. This focus on whole life carbon moves beyond operational efficiency, placing embodied carbon in materials and construction methods under stricter evaluation. It signals stronger accountability across sustainable building design, resource efficiency in construction, and life cycle cost analysis.

National governments’ endorsement of integrity principles for voluntary carbon markets could redirect climate finance toward projects demonstrating clear contributions from sustainable construction and low carbon design. Clean construction must demonstrate not only carbon footprint reduction but also verifiable outcomes, reinforcing the demand for lifecycle assessment and environmental product declarations (EPDs) across the supply chain. This momentum aligns with the developments described in Governments Endorse Principles for High-Quality Carbon Credits.

Ofgem’s £164 million investment in the UK’s hydrogen backbone underscores the urgency of developing net zero carbon buildings and energy-efficient buildings capable of integrating renewable heating technologies. These measures are shaping the long-term path toward net zero whole life carbon while influencing sustainable material specification and low carbon construction materials adoption.

Innovation remains essential to maintaining public confidence in sustainable urban development. Reports emphasising smarter renewable deployment encourage life cycle thinking in construction to prevent grid strain as solar infrastructure expands. Photovoltaic systems installed on public buildings illustrate how decentralised generation can reinforce green infrastructure and eco-design for buildings while improving lifecycle performance outcomes, a trend highlighted in Great British Energy announces latest wave of 250 solar school projects.

More than six million small and medium-size enterprises that underpin construction supply chains now call for policy support to sustain the shift toward carbon neutral construction and green building materials. Their role in advancing circular economy in construction, end-of-life reuse in construction, and circular construction strategies remains decisive. Without robust frameworks supporting sustainable building practices and the circular economy, the ambition to decarbonise the built environment and achieve green, low-impact construction risks losing momentum, as echoed in COP30: SMEs demand more support from governments to help them reach net zero.

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