In the first week of a new Trump administration, President Joe Biden’s...

CNN Climate 1 year ago

In the first week of a new Trump administration, President Joe Biden’s climate wins would get put through the shredder. Over the months that follow, Biden’s climate rules would be methodically rolled back: limits on tailpipe pollution and unhealthy emissions from power plants, and new safeguards on the oil and gas industry. Trump’s actions could leave the United States isolated from key allies on a global crisis in its deciding moments. 2023 was the hottest year on record and the rising heat is pushing the world closer and closer to irreparable harm. “He has said he’s going to come back with a vengeance,” former US special climate envoy John Kerry told CNN. “It would really be just a catastrophic outcome.” This vision of the future is based on interviews with more than a dozen people: industry analysts, public officials and insiders from the former Trump administration, some of whom are involved in Project 2025, a conservative strategy guide to reshape the federal government in the event of a Trump win. But it’s also based on what Trump has said himself. Click the link in CNN’s bio for more. 📸: Mark Newman/The Image Bank RF/Getty Images/David Paul Morris/Bloomberg/Frederic J. Brown/AFP

layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 1 hour ago



The UK Government’s decision to triple domestic heat pump manufacturing funding to £90 million marks a significant step toward advancing net zero carbon buildings and sustainable construction. The investment, part of the Heat Pump Investment Accelerator Competition, supports a shift from fossil-fuel heating systems toward low carbon design alternatives. This strategy strengthens the UK’s capacity to measure and manage embodied carbon and whole life carbon across the built environment, setting a pathway for a new generation of energy-efficient buildings aligned with a circular economy in construction.

The funding increase is expected to boost supply chains for low embodied carbon materials, encouraging manufacturers to undertake whole life carbon assessment and lifecycle assessment processes when scaling production. By integrating life cycle cost considerations into both product development and procurement, construction firms can enhance environmental sustainability in construction and drive improvements in sustainable building practices that are measurable, verifiable, and fully compliant with BREEAM and BREEAM v7 certification frameworks.

Heat pumps are being positioned as a cornerstone of low carbon building performance, essential to reducing the carbon footprint of construction projects while improving renewable energy use in the housing sector. This transition links closely to sustainable building design and eco-design for buildings, where life cycle thinking in construction ensures long-term energy efficiency, resource efficiency in construction, and end-of-life reuse in construction. It forms part of a broader shift toward carbon neutral construction that aligns industry performance with national climate targets under the Clean Heat Mechanism.

The Government’s emphasis on green infrastructure and off-grid electric vehicle charging further supports sustainable urban development and decarbonising the built environment. Investment in renewable building materials and green building products underpins a new generation of low carbon construction materials built for the circular economy. These measures encourage stakeholders to consider embodied carbon in materials and carbon footprint reduction strategies, setting new benchmarks for sustainable design and environmental product declarations (EPDs).

Grassroots initiatives like the Dorset COP showcase how sustainable building practices can emerge from local engagement. By connecting policy ambition with practical delivery, such forums demonstrate the role of community-led sustainable architecture and eco-friendly construction in achieving net zero whole life carbon goals. This balanced approach to sustainable construction links technology, funding, and local action, forming the structural backbone of a low-impact construction future. Through collaboration and evidence-based standards, the UK’s construction sector continues to lay the foundations for a built environment defined by resilience, circular construction strategies, and enduring environmental stewardship.

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