Huge tributaries that feed the mighty Amazon River — the largest on the planet — have plunged to record-low levels, upending lives, stranding boats, and threatening endangered dolphins as drought grips Brazil.
The country is currently enduring its worst drought since records began in 1950, according to Cemaden, the country’s natural disaster monitoring center.
It’s Brazil’s second straight year of extreme drought. Nearly 60% of the country is affected, with some cities, including the capital Brasília, enduring more than 140 consecutive days without rain.
In the heart of the Amazon rainforest, the impact on rivers is shocking and experts are sounding the alarm on what this means for the region, a biodiversity hot spot and crucial climate change buffer.
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📸: Edmar Barros/AP
The Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors has called on the Chancellor to realign fiscal and regulatory frameworks to advance sustainable building practices and resource efficiency in construction. The institution’s appeal underlines the need for clearer guidance on life cycle cost analysis, sustainable building design and lifecycle assessment methodologies that support sustainable material specification. Its position reflects mounting pressure for policy coherence that joins sustainable urban development, green infrastructure and carbon neutral construction within one coherent market structure.
At the EU level, a 2040 emissions-cut target of 90% builds a continent-wide platform for low carbon design and sustainable architecture standards. The move, although faced with criticism over carbon credit offsets, signals growing consistency in whole life carbon metrics across borders. It also strengthens demand for low embodied carbon materials and green building products aligned with BREEAM and BREEAM v7 benchmarks.
The combined impact of these measures defines a critical moment in sustainable construction and environmental sustainability in construction. Policy fragmentation still restrains the full application of life cycle thinking in construction and the integration of eco-design for buildings. The year ahead will determine whether the UK and EU convert strategic ambition into measurable reductions in embodied carbon in materials, credible lifecycle performance outcomes and a verifiable path to net zero whole life carbon across the built environment.
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