Happy #WorldWetlandsDay!
🌱 Wetlands cover only 6% of the worlds' land surface, yet 40% of all plants and animals depend on them.
They are biodiversity hotspots, and they act as powerful carbon sinks helping to fight climate change.
⚠️ But they're also the ecosystems with the highest rates of decline, loss, and degradation.
That’s why the EU Habitat Directive protects 28 wetland habitat types, such as peatlands and wet forests, listing them as priority habitats for restoration actions.
The EU Nature Restoration Regulation focuses on restoring wetlands by:
🦆 increasing biodiversity
đź’§ securing the things nature does for free, like cleaning our water and air and protecting us from floods
🌡️ limiting global warming to 1.5°C
🌽 preventing natural disasters and reducing risks to food security
🆕 With the LIFE programme's biggest project so far – LIFE HumedalES – the EU will restore more than 26,000 hectares of wetlands across Spain.
Read more in the link in bio.
Embodied carbon has become central to sustainable construction, reshaping both regulation and design priorities across the UK and Europe. The Future Homes Hub has established its Embodied Carbon and Resource Efficiency Board, embedding whole life carbon thinking across housebuilding and accelerating the shift towards rigorous whole life carbon assessment. With the EU’s carbon border adjustment mechanism influencing procurement, supply chains are turning to verifiable lifecycle assessments and environmental product declarations (EPDs) to prove performance and reduce the carbon footprint of construction.
Materials innovation is driving decarbonising the built environment. Bio-based and low carbon construction materials such as wood fibre insulation are emerging as credible renewable building materials for walls, roofs, and floors. They support energy-efficient buildings through enhanced thermal performance, moisture buffering, and circular economy benefits, aligning with eco-design for buildings and resource efficiency in construction. The rise of low embodied carbon materials strengthens environmental sustainability in construction while supporting sustainable building practices within the broader circular economy in construction.
Design priorities are evolving from climate mitigation to resilience. With extreme heat intensifying, the UN-backed methodology for National Cooling Action Plans in MENA regions promotes sustainable building design through passive cooling, efficient refrigerant choice, and low carbon design strategies. Private sector adaptation, including large retailers conducting building lifecycle performance analytics, reflects a shift from ESG statements to measurable sustainability outcomes and long-term life cycle cost management.
The UK’s construction leadership warns that rapid delivery must not compromise quality. Integrating sustainable material specification, circular construction strategies, and end-of-life reuse in construction within all programmes is crucial for achieving net zero whole life carbon targets. Measuring embodied carbon in materials and specifying net zero carbon buildings at scale ensures carbon footprint reduction while maximising the environmental and functional performance of each asset. Those investing in design rigour, lifecycle assessment, and the continuous improvement demanded by standards such as BREEAM and BREEAM v7 will define the future of green construction, carbon neutral construction, and sustainable urban development.
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