In the midst of an exceptionally warm winter, resorts like Campo Felice have a...

CNN Climate 2 years ago

In the midst of an exceptionally warm winter, resorts like Campo Felice have a major problem: there’s no snow. And a long-running drought means there isn’t enough water to make the amount of artificial snow needed to paint its slopes white. What little snow the resort’s owners produce is at constant threat of melting in the warmth. But they have managed to make enough for four pistes — ribbons of white on the bald brown hills. It’s something, at least, but a far cry from its usual 14 slopes. February is on track to be the warmest on record for the planet, following a record-hot year, as climate change and El Niño combined to make for a miserable ski season in many parts of the Northern Hemisphere. Devastating snow loss has hit European skiing particularly hard, including in the more famous Alps and Dolomites to the north. Click the link in bio for more. 📸 : CNN

layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 9 hours ago



The tightening political and regulatory environment is redefining sustainable construction. Developers across the UK face increasingly robust frameworks demanding measurable reductions in whole life carbon and embodied carbon in materials. Planning instruments such as the London Plan now compel rigorous whole life carbon assessment and life cycle cost analysis, establishing low carbon design and circular economy principles as non‑negotiable components of sustainable building design. Compliance with BREEAM and emerging benchmarks like BREEAM v7 is shifting from voluntary demonstration of green intent to a precondition for planning approval.

The slowdown in project approvals and financing reflects the sector’s adaptation to these demands. Yet this constraint is catalysing innovation in low carbon construction materials and renewable building materials that support carbon footprint reduction. Firms are advancing eco‑design for buildings that integrate life cycle thinking in construction and optimise building lifecycle performance to minimise the environmental impact of construction across production, use, and end‑of‑life reuse in construction. The drive for resource efficiency in construction is reinforcing a business case for sustainable material specification and environmental product declarations (EPDs) that transparently measure embodied carbon.

Environmental sustainability in construction now encompasses direct ecosystem restoration. Projects applying circular construction strategies and green infrastructure are linking sustainable urban development with environmental regeneration. Water management through nanobubble treatment and peatland restoration demonstrates carbon neutral construction practice within a broader circular economy in construction framework. The emphasis is shifting from rhetoric about net zero carbon buildings towards verifiable net zero whole life carbon outcomes.

Economic pressure, regulatory clarity and ecological urgency are aligning to decarbonise the built environment. Sustainable building practices grounded in low‑impact construction are steadily reshaping the definition of green construction, paving the way for a resilient, energy‑efficient building sector that builds within planetary limits.

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