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

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Researchers in Denmark are advancing a potential breakthrough in sustainable construction with the development of a living cement made with bacteria. The material gains strength over time and could also store energy, opening possibilities for net zero carbon buildings that contribute directly to the energy grid. Such innovations highlight how renewable building materials and low carbon construction materials can address embodied carbon in materials and reshape the carbon footprint of construction at scale. This aligns with global demand for Whole Life Carbon Assessment methods that evaluate both performance and energy contribution across the full lifecycle.

In Glasgow, the adaptive reuse of the historic Teacher building into low carbon design apartments demonstrates how sustainable building design can retain cultural value while improving environmental sustainability in construction. By upgrading heritage architecture into energy-efficient buildings, the project integrates sustainable building practices with eco-design for buildings, illustrating how Whole Life Carbon is reduced when existing structures are retrofitted rather than rebuilt. Such efforts contribute to sustainable urban development by reusing embodied carbon already locked into older structures.

Industrial-scale innovation is also visible in the shift towards cleaner energy sources. Kimberly-Clark has introduced green hydrogen boilers at its UK manufacturing plants, projected to cut emissions by 28,500 tonnes per year. This operational change offers lessons in decarbonising the built environment, where lifecycle assessment and Life Cycle Costing modelling underline the value of investing in resource efficiency in construction supply chains. Reducing carbon footprint at the supply stage supports the transition towards low embodied carbon materials for eco-friendly construction.

Policy decisions are exerting pressure on the sector. The UK government’s approval of Gatwick Airport expansion raises questions over environmental sustainability in construction and sustainable urban development. With plans for 100,000 additional flights, critics highlight the conflict with climate targets and net zero Whole Life Carbon ambitions. The challenge for construction stakeholders lies in demonstrating Whole Life Carbon Assessments that align infrastructure growth with sustainable architecture and carbon footprint reduction.

Progress in recyclable design also marks a shift towards Circular Economy in construction. Fully recyclable toothpaste tubes, now manufactured with HDPE, signal how circular construction strategies can extend even to small-scale building products. Applying life cycle thinking in construction ensures end-of-life reuse in construction materials, supporting Circular Economy goals and reducing the environmental impact of construction through sustainable material specification.

Waste management remains a critical barrier. The collapse of key landfill operator Avondale Environmental has exposed the fragility of existing systems. With reliance on landfill becoming incompatible with sustainable construction goals, stronger investment in Circular Economy strategies and end-of-life reuse in construction is urgent. This reflects growing recognition that building lifecycle performance depends on embedding circular construction strategies and ensuring carbon neutral construction workflows rather than deferring emissions to disposal.

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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.