Five activists of the Just Stop Oil environmental campaign have been handed...

CNN Climate 1 year ago

Five activists of the Just Stop Oil environmental campaign have been handed prison sentences for their involvement in organizing protests that blocked a major London highway in 2022, PA media reported, sparking a wave of criticism from climate advocates. 'Just Stop Oil' co-founder Roger Hallam, 58, Daniel Shaw, 38, Louise Lancaster, 58, Lucia Whittaker De Abreu, 35, and Cressida Gethin, 22, agreed to cause disruption to traffic by having protesters climb onto gantries over the M25 highway that encircles London for four successive days in November 2022, Judge Christopher Hehir said at the sentencing hearing at a court in the British capital on Thursday, according to the UK news agency. Hallam was sentenced to five years' imprisonment while the remaining four defendants were each handed four years in prison each. Tap the link in our bio for more. 📸: Leon Neal/Getty Images

layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 12 hours ago



The sustainable construction sector faces an intensifying test of credibility as shifting climate policies and volatile funding threaten progress toward net zero carbon buildings across the UK. A potential reduction in energy efficiency support could impede the delivery of low carbon design strategies and undermine the government’s commitment to environmental sustainability in construction. With the built environment generating roughly 40% of national emissions, the withdrawal of financial incentives risks increasing the carbon footprint of construction and delaying progress on whole life carbon assessment and lifecycle assessment targets. Effective policy continuity remains crucial for maintaining sustainable building design and measurable carbon footprint reduction.

At the international level, the COP30 debate on climate finance sharpened focus on equitable access to funds that can advance low carbon building projects and circular economy in construction models across developing regions. Debt-free financing may enable the adoption of renewable building materials, eco-design for buildings and localised low embodied carbon materials, empowering communities to engage in sustainable building practices aligned with whole life carbon principles. These pathways reinforce a broader transition toward resource efficiency in construction, where life cycle cost analysis and end-of-life reuse in construction become key factors in sustainable material specification.

Corporate accountability continues to lag. Fewer than half of major global firms have science-based targets, limiting the pace of decarbonising the built environment. The construction supply chain’s dependence on embodied carbon in materials and complex procurement structures highlights the urgency of integrated whole life carbon assessment frameworks. Emulating cross-sector collaborations such as those in fashion industry decarbonisation efforts could stimulate sector-wide adoption of circular construction strategies and carbon neutral construction approaches guided by BREEAM and BREEAM V7 standards.

Artificial intelligence now enters the conversation as a driver of sustainable design and building lifecycle performance optimisation. Data-driven modelling can significantly improve energy-efficient buildings and enhance life cycle thinking in construction. Yet digital tools must be deployed within a low-impact construction framework to ensure resilience and minimise environmental impact of construction.

Sustainable construction stands at a crossroads defined by financial equity, governance stability and the need for measurable carbon reduction. The industry’s capacity to embed circular economy principles and net zero whole life carbon targets into every stage of design, specification and operation will determine not only environmental outcomes but also the long-term viability of the global green construction agenda.

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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.