Can penguins fly? đ§
Scientists theorise that penguins used to be able to fly, but that their wings became better adapted to swimming with evolution, and less suited to flight. Now, their flippers are well designed for seamlessly diving into the ocean, but nothing stops them from flapping them on land!
#EarthCapture by @myeonghoseo
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#Penguin #Antarctica #ArcticAnimals
The UK construction sector is tightening its focus on sustainability through quantifiable carbon reduction and stricter regulation. The governmentâs new Steel Strategy, coupling increased import tariffs with ÂŁ2.5âŻbillion in electricâarc furnace investment, positions embodied carbon control as a domestic priority. By linking embodied carbon in materials to clean energy supply and consistent scrap flows, policy is aligning with whole life carbon targets and whole life carbon assessment frameworks that integrate economic and environmental performance over each projectâs life cycle. Specifiers are now embedding recycled content, verified chainâofâcustody, and life cycle cost into procurement to support sustainable building design and verifiable environmental product declarations (EPDs).
Waste enforcement is intensifying through a ÂŁ45âŻmillion boost to the Environment Agency, diminishing outlets for unverified waste handling. Circular economy in construction principles are becoming commercial reality, with designâforâdeconstruction, takeâback schemes, and endâofâlife reuse in construction treated as core elements of sustainable building practices, risk management, and resource efficiency in construction. These changes reinforce circular construction strategies and help reduce the carbon footprint of construction.
Innovation at project level continues, marked by the appearance of electric heavy plant such as the A47âs electric paver and roller. These net zero carbon technologies demonstrate how energyâefficient buildings and low carbon construction materials are extending into infrastructure, anchoring low carbon design credibility on site.
Strategic planning is also advancing. Northern Irelandâs adaptation plan and the UK Land Use Framework link climate resilience with brownfield regeneration and green infrastructure, illustrating how sustainable urban development relies on lifecycle assessment, land value optimisation, and the circular economy.
Water scarcity and forest protection have become new policy guardrails. As data centre expansion grows, operational water standards are being strengthened under sustainable material specification criteria, while scrutiny of timber sourcing rises after evidence that Swedenâs oldâgrowth forests hold significantly higher carbon reserves. This heightens demand for responsible use of renewable building materials that lower the embodied carbon footprint without undermining biodiversity.
The direction of travel is explicit: achieving net zero whole life carbon and carbon neutral construction now depends on measurable carbon footprint reduction, credible lifecycle thinking in construction, and verifiable progress toward decarbonising the built environment. Green construction has transitioned from aspiration to core policy, defining the future of sustainable construction and ecoâdesign for buildings.
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