Guess the sector that uses the most water? Clean water is vital for life. It...

EU Environment and Planet 2 months ago

Guess the sector that uses the most water? Clean water is vital for life. It is: 💧 supporting ecosystems 💧 regulating the climate 💧 crucial for the economy, energy production and agriculture. Yet water supplies face growing pressures from pollution and extreme weather events, disrupting economies, transport, and food production. Solutions exist, and many involve working with nature. The EU is helping farmers adopt more sustainable practices that protect biodiversity, boost soil health, and make food systems more resilient. These efforts reflect the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework’s Target 10, which calls for sustainable management of agriculture, aquaculture, fisheries, and forestry — ensuring that production supports both people and the planet. #WaterWiseEU #COP30 #UNBiodiversity #ForNature

layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 3 hours ago



Westminster’s £15 billion Warm Homes Plan signals a decisive shift toward sustainable building design and low carbon construction materials. The policy aims to retrofit five million homes, embedding energy‑efficient buildings and sustainable construction as national priorities. Success depends on skilled installers, verified performance data, and consistent standards that meet BREEAM V7 and whole life carbon assessment benchmarks. The Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors stresses that quality assurance and lifecycle assessment must guide procurement to achieve genuine environmental sustainability in construction rather than short‑term gains.

Legal challenges such as the High Court case against Gatwick’s expansion confirm that climate accountability now defines planning risk. Projects unable to demonstrate credible embodied carbon reduction or transparent whole life carbon data will face increasing resistance. Regulatory scrutiny is expanding to lifecycle cost analysis and life cycle thinking in construction, ensuring that both operational energy and embodied carbon in materials are addressed within design approvals.

A new Carbon Majors study tracing half of global emissions to 32 companies, including cement producers, intensifies pressure to decarbonise the built environment. Demand is accelerating for renewable building materials, low embodied carbon materials, and eco‑design for buildings that support circular economy in construction principles. Designers and developers aligning with sustainable material specification and carbon neutral construction can leverage investor appetite for demonstrable carbon footprint reduction.

The market is entering a phase in which retrofit drives growth, permitting tightens for high‑impact schemes, and capital prioritises projects achieving net zero whole life carbon. Firms evidencing performance across building lifecycle performance, environmental product declarations (EPDs), and resource efficiency in construction will lead the transition toward net zero carbon buildings and verifiable green construction outcomes.

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