More than 24 million people in southern Africa face hunger, malnutrition and water scarcity due to drought and floods, aid group Oxfam says. The warning came as Zimbabwe joined other southern African nations in declaring its drought a national disaster.
The drought has been fueled by El Niño, a natural climate pattern originating in the Pacific Ocean along the equator, which tends to bring high temperatures and low rainfall to this part of Africa. When it does rain, dried-out ground is unable to absorb the moisture, making flooding more likely.
El Niño is exacerbating the impacts of the climate crisis, caused primarily by burning fossil fuels, which is driving more frequent and severe weather across southern Africa.
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📸: Matonhodze/Bloomberg/Getty Images
The UK’s sustainable construction sector is moving from policy statements to measurable performance. The focus on embodied carbon is intensifying as the housing industry establishes an Embodied Carbon and Resource Efficiency Board to integrate whole life carbon assessment into new‑build standards. This development aligns with the growing demand for verified data through lifecycle assessment and environmental product declarations (EPDs), driven by the EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism. Product‑level transparency is becoming an essential compliance factor within the framework of environmental sustainability in construction.
Material innovation is progressing. Wood fibre insulation and other low embodied carbon materials are being adopted in mainstream housebuilding, strengthening sustainable material specification and supporting the circular economy in construction. These renewable building materials combine low carbon design with improved indoor comfort, making green construction an attainable default rather than a niche practice.
Global climate pressures are redefining sustainable building design. The UN‑endorsed National Cooling Action Plan Methodology for the MENA region introduces a model for energy‑efficient buildings that balance passive strategies, efficient systems, and refrigerant management within net zero whole life carbon objectives. The approach complements BREEAM and BREEAM v7 frameworks that encourage eco‑design for buildings and sustainable building practices.
Developers and suppliers face stricter expectations for defensible whole life carbon performance, resource efficiency in construction, and life cycle cost transparency. Those unable to demonstrate reductions in the carbon footprint of construction or to apply circular construction strategies risk exclusion from competitive procurement. Clients and regulators increasingly link carbon neutral construction and sustainable design with building lifecycle performance, demanding actionable evidence that projects contribute to decarbonising the built environment and long‑term sustainability.
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