Across Europe countries are dismantling aging dams and weirs — barriers that once powered mills and factories but now often serve little purpose.
A record 603 barriers were removed across 21 countries in 2025 — the highest number ever recorded — according to the latest annual report by Dam Removal Europe, a coalition of six organizations working to restore river connectivity.
The removals helped reconnect more than 2,324 miles of rivers across the continent and are tied to the EU's goal of restoring 15,534 miles of free-flowing rivers by 2030.
According to the report, released last week, the number of removed barriers surpassed the previous record set in 2024 by 11%. Removals in 2025 were also six times higher than the first count conducted in 2020.
The numbers signal that river restoration is becoming more widely adopted but also reflect a broader reassessment of how rivers function in an era of climate extremes. What was once seen as progress is increasingly viewed as a growing environmental liability.
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📸: Lou Benoist/AFP via Getty Images; Mikko Nikkinen/Storymakers; Esa Hiltula/Getty Images; Mikko Nikkinen/WWF; Esa Hiltula/Getty Images
Britain’s ageing building stock is being forced into rapid reconsideration as climate pressures mount. The Climate Change Committee’s call for resilience has pushed sustainable construction into a new phase where adaptation joins mitigation as a driver of policy and design, as noted in UK Homes Are Unfit for Rising Temperatures. Architects and engineers are turning to sustainable building design and eco-design for buildings that prioritise low carbon design, resilience, and occupant wellbeing. The focus is widening to include the carbon footprint of construction, lifecycle assessment, and the need for circular construction strategies that enable end-of-life reuse in construction.
In North London, a residential development constructed with a calcined clay cement blend has demonstrated measurable advances in low carbon construction materials, similar to those described in North London apartment block built with lower carbon concrete mix in 'UK first'. Cutting embodied carbon by up to ten per cent, the innovation illustrates the growing commitment to reducing embodied carbon in materials and promoting green construction practices. These early applications of renewable building materials signal tangible progress towards net zero whole life carbon and net zero carbon buildings that align with broader goals of decarbonising the built environment.
The UK Green Building Council’s Whole Life Cycle Carbon Framework establishes a clear benchmark for whole life carbon assessment and life cycle thinking in construction. It extends beyond operational energy performance to encompass the full environmental impact of construction, from material sourcing through demolition. This methodology integrates life cycle cost analysis with environmental product declarations (EPDs) to support sustainable material specification and verifiable reductions in embodied emissions.
Such progress represents a crucial shift from focusing solely on energy-efficient buildings to measuring the total building lifecycle performance. The adoption of standards such as BREEAM and its forthcoming BREEAM v7 reinforce environmental sustainability in construction and encourage sustainable building practices across the industry. As global priorities converge on carbon neutral construction and circular economy models, the sector is redefining what a low carbon building represents—an asset designed through sustainable architecture and maintained through resource efficiency in construction.
The convergence of research, policy, and innovation is reshaping the built environment into one aligned with sustainable urban development and green infrastructure objectives. The trajectory suggests a maturing discipline that views sustainability not as a marketing claim but as quantifiable whole life carbon performance embedded in every stage of design, construction, and operation, driven by frameworks like UKGBC’s initiative to reduce whole life carbon of building projects.
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