Etched onto rocks on a remote peninsula in Western Australia are millions of images drawn tens of thousands of years ago by the country's original inhabitants, including the earliest known depictions of the human face.
This open-air display of some of humanity's oldest works is being slowly erased by industrial pollution from a nearby gas plant, according to scientific studies that have been swept up in an almighty clash of competing ambitions for the region's future.
At the center of the dispute is whether oil and gas company Woodside should be allowed to operate its Karratha Gas Plant until 2070, and on Wednesday Environment Minister Murray Watt gave "proposed" approval for the extension, with "strict conditions" relating to air quality. Woodside has 10 days to respond before Watt makes a final decision, he said in a statement.
Read more at the link in our bio.
📸: Save our Songlines; Greenpeace Australia Pacific
The transition marks a decisive step toward net zero whole life carbon outcomes and an industry aligned with low carbon construction materials and renewable building materials. Policy and oversight are reshaping the framework of environmental sustainability in construction. The UK Climate Change Committee’s warning about the country’s outdated infrastructure has driven a review of sustainable building design, retrofit strategy and resilience standards.
Across Europe, assessments of natural capital are influencing budget plans and encouraging circular economy in construction investment to safeguard soil, water and ecosystem services that underpin eco-friendly construction and green building materials supply chains. Regulatory shifts underline a broader move towards sustainable building practices and transparent lifecycle assessment.
The tightening of environmental rules in the United States, alongside fresh attention to environmental product declarations (EPDs), reflects a commitment to decarbonising the built environment. Financial modelling is edging closer to integrating life cycle cost and life cycle thinking in construction so that investors reward projects promoting resilience and resource efficiency in construction rather than short‑term compliance.
The global construction sector is entering a phase where sustainable construction and low carbon design define competitiveness. From eco-design for buildings and BREEAM v7 certification to circular construction strategies and end-of-life reuse in construction, industry leaders see that green construction, carbon neutral construction, and net zero carbon buildings are not aspirational ideals but essential metrics of sustainable urban development.
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