It’s World Migratory Bird Day! 🐦
Did you know that the common swift travels up to 20,000 km from Europe to Africa each autumn?
It is one of the most remarkable long distance birds spending the majority of its life in the air.
However, birds that migrate through the African-Eurasian Flyway could face various threats, from habitat loss to illegal killing, most of them being anthropogenic such as pollution.
That’s why the EU Birds Directive aims to:
🐦protect all naturally occurring wild bird species and their most important habitats
🐦halt the decline or disappearance of bird specie
🐦allow bird species to recover and thrive over the long-term
As a citizen you can also help — for example by registering your observations on local bird portals and contributing data
#wmbd2025 #worldmigratorybirdday
The UK government has recognised that data centres are a material part of the national sustainability in construction agenda. Parliament’s Environmental Audit Committee is examining energy use, water consumption and emissions, expanding the conversation beyond IT to whole life carbon.
The inquiry is expected to shape future planning policy, mandating developers to demonstrate lower embodied carbon in materials and to conduct whole life carbon assessments as part of sustainable building design. Data centre resilience against flood risk and stressed utilities reflects a shift towards life cycle cost management and environmental sustainability in construction.
Circular economy strategies are gaining commercial traction. Analysis in Scotland confirms that circular-economy employment delivers stronger value per hour, reinforcing the case for circular economy in construction, reuse and end-of-life reuse in construction. Pressure is growing for verified resource efficiency in construction through traceable waste governance and circular construction strategies.
The quality of recycled polymers is under review, and if recycling capacity falters, access to reliable green building products and low carbon construction materials will tighten. Contractors adopting sustainable building practices grounded in lifecycle assessment and environmental product declarations (EPDs) are better positioned to meet compliance expectations and secure green procurement advantages.
International data indicating lower emissions from China’s manufacturing sector signal a modest decline in the embodied carbon of imported building components. This supports life cycle thinking in construction and the pursuit of net zero whole life carbon outcomes. For developers aligning projects with BREEAM or BREEAM v7, reduced embodied carbon contributes directly to net zero carbon buildings and low carbon design benchmarks. As decarbonising the built environment becomes a planning prerequisite, evidence of carbon footprint reduction, renewable building materials and sustainable material specification is evolving from best practice to basic permission to build.
Whole Life Carbon is a platform for the entire construction industry—both in the UK and internationally. We track the latest publications, debates, and events related to whole life guidance and sustainability. If you have any enquiries or opinions to share, please do
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