How much warmer is your city than its rural surroundings?
While heatwaves are becoming more frequent and intense due to climate change, cities are particularly vulnerable due to the 𝐔𝐫𝐛𝐚𝐧 𝐇𝐞𝐚𝐭 𝐈𝐬𝐥𝐚𝐧𝐝 (𝐔𝐇𝐈) 𝐞𝐟𝐟𝐞𝐜𝐭, where urban areas become significantly hotter than the countryside around them. 🌡️
To combat this, we need to not only rapidly reduce greenhouse gas emissions, but increase our cities' resilience.
This can be done by implementing green and blue infrastructures, such as planting more trees, promoting green walls and water in public areas, or retrofitting and buildings. These approaches can create more inclusive, fair and resilient cities! 🌳💧
Read more in the latest @eu_science report, link in bio 🔗
#Cities #Infrastrcuture #Climate
The Planning and Infrastructure Act with Royal Assent marks a structural shift in UK sustainable construction. The confirmation of the Nature Restoration Fund embeds environmental sustainability in construction as a financial and design parameter. Developers are being pressed to integrate eco-design for buildings that secure measurable biodiversity gains through sustainable building design and avoid reliance on late-stage offsets. The new framework compels teams to embed life cycle thinking in construction and net zero Whole Life Carbon goals at concept stage, linking green infrastructure and green building materials with demonstrable life cycle cost benefits.
The National Wealth Fund’s £800m guarantee for SSEN Transmission’s northern Scotland upgrade is significant for decarbonising the built environment. Enhanced transmission capacity strengthens the credibility of net zero carbon buildings and all-electric, low carbon design strategies. It enables contractors to adopt resource efficiency in construction through on-site flexibility solutions such as storage and hybrid power. Grid readiness becomes a core marker of low carbon building performance, reinforcing the importance of lifecycle assessment and embodied carbon data in project delivery.
Thames Water’s long-term onshore wind agreement exemplifies carbon footprint reduction at infrastructure scale. This move accelerates a shift towards circular economy in construction, low embodied carbon materials, and the broader application of carbon neutral construction practices across supply chains. Clients expect partners to deliver sustainable building practices that quantify embodied carbon in materials and achieve verifiable net zero carbon outcomes, supported by Whole Life Carbon Assessment and BREEAM or BREEAM v7 certification.
Government rhetoric defining nature as critical national infrastructure is reshaping procurement. Tenders increasingly demand whole life carbon analysis, carbon footprint of construction metrics, and renewable building materials that support end-of-life reuse in construction. The emphasis is on circular construction strategies, sustainable material specification, and building lifecycle performance aligned with whole life carbon baselines. Industry leaders are adjusting to a future where sustainable construction is no longer aspirational but a regulated expectation, reinforcing the commercial case for sustainable design and the Circular Economy.
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