An image of a rare white humpback whale calf and its mother won top prize at the 2026 World Nature Photography Awards.
Taken by Jono Allen, who received a cash prize of $1,000, the Australian described the day he photographed the duo as “a memory that will live with me forever” and “a truly life-changing encounter.”
Albinism among humpback whales is extremely rare, with as few as one in 40,000 born with the condition, which affects skin pigmentation. The calf Allen photographed, called Mãhina, was first spotted in the summer of 2024, in Vava’u, Tonga, where Allen also observed it. The whale’s name means “moon” in Tongan.
The World Nature Photography Awards received entries from 51 countries. Other category winners included a female gorilla observing a butterfly in Bwindi Impenetrable Forest, Uganda, a Namaqua chameleon weathering a sandstorm in the Namid Desert, Namibia, and a polar bear investigating a pile of e-waste in Manitoba, Canada. Entries for next year’s prize are already being accepted.
See more at the link in @cnn’s bio. #calltoearth
📸: Jono Allen/World Nature Photography Awards; Charile Wemyss-Dunn/World Nature Photography Awards; Deena Sveinsson/World Nature Photography Awards; Duncan Wood/World Nature Photography Awards; Mary Schrader/World Nature Photography Awards; Minghui Yuan/World Nature Photography Awards; Robert Gloeckner/World Nature Photography Awards; Vaidehi Chandrasekar; Bill Klipp/World Nature Photography Awards; Michael Stavrakakis/World Nature Photography Awards; Vince Burton/World Nature Photography Awards; Aimee Jan/World Nature Photography Awards; Mark Bernards/World Nature Photography Awards; Thiago Campi/World Nature Photography Awards
The global rules for measuring climate performance in construction have shifted. The Greenhouse Gas Protocol has introduced an international framework for land‑use emissions and carbon removals, transforming how whole life carbon, embodied carbon, and net zero whole life carbon are reported across sustainable construction projects. This update reshapes whole life carbon assessment by demanding transparent accounting for biogenic carbon, embodied carbon in materials, and end‑of‑life factors within environmental product declarations (EPDs). Designers must now consider durability, leakage and additionality alongside sustainable material specification and sourcing choices, recalibrating the carbon footprint of construction and influencing future low embodied carbon materials strategies. Corporate claims around carbon neutral construction or net zero carbon buildings will require verifiable data aligned with recognised lifecycle assessment standards such as BREEAM and the emerging BREEAM v7 methodology.
Heightened legal scrutiny is reshaping sustainability marketing. German regulators have already required major retailers to withdraw misleading “net‑zero” messaging, a signal that accountability now defines credibility. Producers of cement, steel and timber promoted as low carbon construction materials or green building products must be able to evidence their environmental sustainability in construction strategies through auditable metrics, reinforcing trust in sustainable building practices and tightening the parameters for eco‑design for buildings. This mirrors the developments covered in Shein sustainability claims challenged in Germany over greenwashing, underscoring how compliance demands are expanding across sectors.
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Projects integrating renewable building materials, end‑of‑life reuse in construction, and circular construction strategies are emerging as the benchmark for low-impact construction that aligns sustainable building design with decarbonising the built environment. These initiatives highlight the growing relevance of Circular Economy principles in mitigating risk and optimising long-term environmental outcomes.
The sector’s competitive advantage is pivoting toward measurable outcomes. Transparent life cycle cost evaluations, resource efficiency in construction, and authentic carbon footprint reduction efforts are overtaking hollow marketing claims. Stakeholders prioritising sustainable architecture, sustainable design, and eco-friendly construction grounded in life cycle thinking in construction will secure finance more easily and maintain market relevance in a tightening regulatory climate defined by verifiable environmental impact of construction performance.
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