As the world warms, we are experiencing longer, hotter and more frequent heatwaves.
đĄď¸ Nigeria, Kenya, South Africa, Thailand, Cambodia and Australia have already broken high temperature records this year.
đ In South America, the devastating effects of heatwaves are being felt in countries such as Argentina, Brazil, and Colombia.
đ Prolonged high temperatures and low rainfall have led to severe drought conditions in southern Italy and Spain, Malta, Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia.
Eleni Mirivili, Global Chief Heat Officer at @unhabitat stresses that nature-based solutions, such as greening cities and restoring green and blue ecosystems, are our best allies in cooling our planet.
The global construction industry is closely monitoring outcomes from COP30 in BelĂŠm as debates over adaptation finance and emissions targets intensify. The summitâs negotiation gridlock between developed and developing nations exposes an ongoing failure to bridge the funding gap required for climate-resilient and sustainable construction across vulnerable regions such as Bangladesh. The absence of robust financial frameworks is delaying progress in carbon neutral construction and the implementation of Whole Life Carbon Assessment methodologies critical to achieving net zero Whole Life Carbon performance in buildings facing extreme weather risks.
Brazilâs role as both host nation and custodian of the Amazon shapes new tensions between deforestation, low carbon design policy ambitions, and land-use reforms that threaten global carbon footprint reduction progress. Any weakening of environmental safeguards could undermine decarbonising the built environment strategies and erode the circular economy in construction principles that underpin resource efficiency in construction initiatives.
In the UK, the Environmental Audit Committee has reaffirmed that nature-positive planning regulations are not impeding housing supply, strengthening the argument for sustainable building design and eco-design for buildings within urban policy frameworks. The Committeeâs position supports the expansion of green infrastructure and sustainable urban development through data-led lifecycle assessment and Life Cycle Cost analysis tools linked to environmental product declarations (EPDs).
Industry leaders continue to push for measurable progress beyond declarations. Adoption of BREEAM v7 and low embodied carbon materials specifications signals growing attention to the embodied carbon challenge and the environmental impact of construction. Better integration of circular construction strategies and end-of-life reuse in construction practices would enhance building lifecycle performance while advancing the Circular Economy transition.
As the built environment sector moves toward net zero carbon buildings, practitioners recognise that tangible decarbonisation relies on aligning public policy, private finance, and innovation in sustainable building practices. The momentum from COP30 underscores that environmental sustainability in construction is not merely policy rhetoric but a technical and economic imperative demanding global coordination.
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