Here’s a little Fourth of July climate tea 🐸🍵 for you. Thomas...

Climate Reality 1 hour ago

Here’s a little Fourth of July climate tea 🐸🍵 for you. Thomas Jefferson kept detailed weather records throughout much of his life, recording thousands of observations over decades. On July 4, 1776, he recorded the temperature in Philadelphia at 76°F at 1 PM. This July 4, Philadelphia is forecast to hit 100°F, with dangerous humidity making it feel even hotter and unbearable. That’s not just a shift in the forecast. That’s the climate crisis showing up in real time. And it’s extremely uncomfortable. For our bodies, communities, and our planet! Stay cool. Check on your people. And remember: Extreme heat is fossil fuel pollution in action in our daily lives. And freedom means we can do something about it.

layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 17 minutes ago



Global markets are shifting from sustainability pledges to measurable outcomes in sustainable construction. With investment threatened by inconsistent regulation, sector leaders are urging a unified approach to whole life carbon measurement and embodied carbon reduction. A coherent policy framework is seen as essential to sustaining private capital flows and scaling low carbon design practices. Although UK construction activity has slowed, the downturn presents an opportunity to integrate whole life carbon assessment and life cycle cost analysis into procurement and planning, embedding environmental sustainability in construction across the supply chain.

Rapid progress in materials science and digital prefabrication is accelerating the move towards circular economy in construction. The adoption of modular and factory-built systems now enables lower embodied carbon in materials, improved resource efficiency in construction, and streamlined building lifecycle performance. Projects using eco-design for buildings and renewable building materials are demonstrating that sustainable building design and low-impact construction can deliver high performance without compromising cost or speed.

Workforce development remains critical to decarbonising the built environment. Training for sustainable building practices and understanding lifecycle assessment principles will underpin the transition to net zero whole life carbon standards. Initiatives such as the NFB Academy highlight the growing demand for expertise in sustainable material specification and life cycle thinking in construction. As BREEAM and BREEAM v7 continue to guide environmental product declarations (EPDs) and low carbon building assessment, the industry is moving towards quantifiable carbon footprint reduction.

The next phase of green construction will depend on aligning skills, policy, and data across the entire value chain. Businesses that integrate sustainable design, circular construction strategies, and end-of-life reuse in construction will lead in achieving carbon neutral construction. The credibility of net zero carbon buildings now hinges on tangible life cycle performance improvements, supported by transparent metrics and verifiable environmental impact of construction data.

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