Keep science on your side – don’t let anyone fool you on this #aprilfoolsday 🧑🔬🌎💚👇
✅Fact: 2024 was the hottest year on record
✅Fact: Globally, 47,000 species are threatened with extinction
✅Fact: 99% of people breathe air contains high levels of pollutants
✅Fact: Climate-induced droughts cost Europe around €9 billion per year
With disinformation on the rise, it’s crucial to talk about the planetary crisis with scientific facts.
Science tells us humans are responsible for global warming, pollution and biodiversity decline. Today, the average temperature of the Earth’s surface is warmer than at any time in the last 100,000 years.
But we have many nature-based solutions that can deliver economic benefits while improving our lives and protecting the environment.
We need to take action for our planet now.
A regulatory and market shift is redefining sustainable construction as mandatory practice. The Environment Agency’s decision to tighten reporting on Green List waste exports strengthens the circular economy in construction by discouraging disposal loopholes and supporting end‑of‑life reuse in construction. This shift drives new value for projects aligned with sustainable building practices, eco‑friendly construction and resource efficiency in construction. Designs optimised for material recovery, green building products and renewable building materials will benefit as lifecycle assessment becomes integral to procurement and compliance.
Mounting concern over PFAS underscores the need for sustainable material specification and transparent supply chains. Rapid substitution with low embodied carbon materials is crucial to reducing the carbon footprint of construction and meeting ambitious whole life carbon targets. Investors and regulators now view embodied carbon in materials and toxicity as twin drivers of risk in building lifecycle performance.
Financial policy is emerging as a critical enabler of the transition. Efforts to unlock SME liquidity through late‑payment reforms support modern methods that cut life cycle cost and facilitate low carbon construction materials deployment. These shifts integrate low carbon design with sustainable building design, reinforcing broader environmental sustainability in construction.
Rising operational energy costs increase demand for energy‑efficient buildings, fabric‑first retrofits and decentralised storage. Such systems demonstrate how net zero carbon buildings and net zero whole life carbon frameworks depend on renewable energy resilience. The Falkirk storage project illustrates the importance of green infrastructure in supporting electrified sites and sustainable urban development.
Global policy momentum is accelerating. International collaboration toward fossil‑fuel phase‑out signals alignment with net zero carbon objectives and carbon neutral construction standards such as BREEAM and BREEAM v7. With public spending now prioritising decarbonising the built environment, fewer but higher‑performing projects will proceed—those that achieve measurable carbon footprint reduction through whole life carbon assessment and circular construction strategies. The market is rewarding deliverable, low‑impact construction driven by strong data, life cycle thinking in construction and verifiable environmental product declarations (EPDs).
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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