A melting glacier draped in the tattered remains of a thermal blanket, a ghostly abandoned mining town in Chile and an ancient tree marked by floodwaters are among the winning images of the Earth Photo 2025 competition.
The award — created in 2018 by Forestry England, the UK's Royal Geographic Society and visual arts consultancy Parker Harris — aims to showcase the issues affecting the climate and life on our planet.
Through the competition, Earth Photo wants to open people's eyes to the stories behind the pictures and encourage conversation and action.
More than 1,500 images and videos were submitted to this year's competition by photographers and filmmakers from all over the world. The winners were announced Monday at a ceremony at London's Royal Geographical Society, ahead of an exhibition of the imagery at the same location.
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📸: Liam Man; Lorenzo Poli; Mateo Borrero; Issam Chorrib; Shane Hynan; Vivian Wan
Carbon policy is splitting between alignment and retreat. The European Union is strengthening its carbon market reserve to stabilise pricing, reinforcing the importance of embodied carbon and whole life carbon assessment in construction. In contrast, UK proposals to abandon carbon pricing would undermine investors in low carbon building and low carbon design while increasing exposure to EU border levies. The shift from voluntary transparency to fiscal accountability means embodied carbon in materials is now a measurable liability. Procurement teams must integrate whole life carbon strategy within sustainable building design, incorporating lifecycle assessment and life cycle cost analysis as standard practice.
Electricity systems are decarbonising faster than building regulations, with renewables now supplying record shares of UK power. Falling costs for electrification make all-electric sites, onsite photovoltaics and heat pumps central to environmental sustainability in construction. Green construction has evolved into a financially sound model rooted in sustainable construction, circular economy in construction principles and net zero carbon buildings. The transition demands life cycle thinking in construction and commitment to resource efficiency throughout the building lifecycle performance chain.
Policy inconsistency in global energy markets threatens progress. The diversion of wind power funding in the United States towards gas export infrastructure risks slowing investment in turbines, ports and vessels critical to net zero whole life carbon delivery. Decarbonising the built environment depends on coherent frameworks that reward carbon footprint reduction, low embodied carbon materials and circular construction strategies.
The urgency of retrofit is escalating across the UK, where analysis of over 6,000 neighbourhoods highlights millions of homes most vulnerable to energy price spikes. Retrofitting with eco-friendly construction techniques, renewable building materials and energy-efficient buildings offers the fastest route to carbon neutral construction. The sector’s imperative is clear: accelerate sustainable building practices, embed BREEAM and BREEAM V7 principles in design, and hardwire environmental product declarations (EPDs) into specification. Waiting for full policy clarity risks slowing sustainability progress and amplifying the environmental impact of construction.
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