Happy #WorldWetlandsDay! 🌱 Wetlands cover only 6% of the worlds' land...

EU Environment and Planet 5 months ago

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 💧 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.

layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 10 hours ago



Regulatory pressure and economic constraint are reshaping sustainable construction into a discipline centred on evidence, cost, and measurable impact. London’s evolving planning regime, tightly aligned with whole life carbon assessment and BREEAM V7 methodology, is accelerating the transition toward genuinely low‑carbon building design. Developers are confronting the need to quantify embodied carbon and integrate lifecycle assessment within financial models that link life cycle cost to environmental performance. The outcome is a clearer definition of what net zero carbon buildings mean in practice—structures designed through sustainable building practices that balance performance, durability, and affordability through low embodied carbon materials and renewable building resources.

Financial uncertainty continues to challenge project delivery, but innovation in eco‑design for buildings is shaping resilience. Bio‑based composites, recycled aggregates, and other low carbon construction materials are reducing the carbon footprint of construction while improving building lifecycle performance. These advances reflect a growing commitment to circular economy principles, encouraging end‑of‑life reuse in construction and integrating circular construction strategies into procurement frameworks.

Market demand for environmental product declarations (EPDs) is rising as investors seek transparency on the environmental impact of construction and its contribution to net zero whole life carbon goals. The global agenda is shifting toward decarbonising the built environment, supported by policies that embed resource efficiency in construction and promote sustainable building design as standard practice rather than innovation.

The push for environmentally sustainable architecture is strengthening links between sustainable material specification and life cycle thinking in construction, driving green infrastructure investment and supporting net zero carbon pathways across urban systems. The sector’s trajectory suggests that environmental sustainability in construction is no longer an aspirational narrative but a measurable economic driver shaping the future of low carbon design and sustainable urban development worldwide.

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