As overfishing rampaged the oceans around the Channel Islands, California’s government took steps to protect the seas by implementing no-take zones. These zones are where no extraction can happen, allowing the ecosystem to settle and bounce back.
Is California onto something?
Follow @imagine5_official for more climate inspiration!
📸:
Slide 1: Ian C Bates / ANP
Slide 2: Brook Peterson / ANP
Slides 3 & 10: Kelsey He / Unsplash
Slide 5: Jeff Rotman / ANP
Slide 6: Ashley Byrd / Unsplash
Slide 7: Kirkendall Spring / ANP
Slide 9: Nature Picture Library / ANP
Slides 12 & 13: Joseph Recca / Unsplash
Sources:
Dr. Jennifer Caselle, A Decade of Protection: 10 Years of Change at the Channel Islands
Satie Airamé, John Ugoretz, Channel Islands Marine Protected Areas - First 5 Years of Monitoring: 2003-2008
Johnny Briggs, How Much of the Ocean Is Really Protected in 2020?
Ocean with David Attenborough
Peter J.S. Jones, Collective action problems posed by no-take zones, Marine Policy, Volume 30, Issue 2, 2006, Pages 143-156, ISSN 0308-597X, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpol.2004.10.003.
The UK construction sector is entering a decisive phase in its journey toward decarbonising the built environment, with government policy now aligned to accelerate low-carbon innovation. A £90 million expansion of the Heat Pump Investment Accelerator is set to strengthen domestic manufacturing capacity and underpin the forthcoming Clean Heat Mechanism. Sales quotas for low-carbon heating systems will compel the industry to move decisively away from gas boilers, reinforcing efforts to deliver net zero carbon buildings and low carbon design across residential and commercial projects. This shift integrates with broader goals around environmental sustainability in construction, transforming how heat technology and sustainable building design are embedded in national infrastructure renewal.
Attention is also turning to embodied carbon—a critical component of whole life carbon assessment. The UK Green Building Council’s new guidance aims to standardise how practitioners quantify embodied carbon in materials, supporting more accurate lifecycle assessment and informed life cycle cost decisions. Early design transparency will prevent emissions underestimation, a persistent challenge within sustainable construction projects. Measuring the whole life carbon of buildings at the concept stage strengthens accountability, ensuring eco-design for buildings aligns with sustainable building practices consistent with BREEAM v7 benchmarks.
In Nottinghamshire, Vital Energi’s solar farm project at Rawcliffe Bridge reflects the widening intersection of green infrastructure and sustainable urban development. By integrating renewable energy assets into local planning, councils are reshaping how energy-efficient buildings interact with larger low-carbon ecosystems. The project reinforces a shift toward circular economy in construction, where energy generation and demand are planned in tandem to uphold net zero whole life carbon objectives. As local authorities push policy frameworks for resource efficiency in construction, such initiatives indicate the growing influence of decentralised renewable assets within the UK’s green construction landscape.
Moves to decarbonise high-emission industries are amplifying this trajectory. The government’s £420 million scheme to reduce energy costs for heavy sectors such as cement, glass, and steel mirrors the broader need for low carbon construction materials and low embodied carbon materials across the supply chain. Cost reductions and decarbonised production will accelerate the supply of green building materials and renewable building materials, boosting procurement for eco-friendly construction. These developments are expected to improve building lifecycle performance, aligning with life cycle thinking in construction and stimulating adoption of circular construction strategies in both design and manufacturing.
The momentum behind sustainable design and carbon neutral construction continues to build, yet integration across supply chains remains uneven. Achieving coherence between operational and embodied performance is essential for both carbon footprint reduction and end-of-life reuse in construction. The sector’s capacity to deliver sustainable material specification based on environmental product declarations (EPDs) will define its success in reducing the carbon footprint of construction. True transformation in sustainable architecture and sustainable building design requires an unbroken thread of accountability linking design intent, materials sourcing, and energy operation—ensuring that every low carbon building contributes meaningfully to a resource-efficient, circular economy future.
Whole Life Carbon is a platform for the entire construction industry—both in the UK and internationally. We track the latest publications, debates, and events related to whole life guidance and sustainability. If you have any enquiries or opinions to share, please do
get in touch.