MOREšNATUREšINšCITIES
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Cities are both victims of climate change and among its worst offenders:
ā”Between 70-80% of global emissions come from urban areasĀ Ā Ā Ā Ā
šØ99% of the global urban population live in areas that exceed air quality standards
š The largest mega-cities concentrate millions of people that are becoming more vulnerable to sudden shocks with every passing year
We can turn this around.
If we bring nature back to our cities, we will have:
āļøCleaner air
š³ Resilient communities and ecosystems
š« Improved health
Want to learn more about how our urban areas can become green hubs?
Join us the Fifth EU Clean Air Forum at the World Conference CenterĀ inĀ Bonn.
š1 December at 13:00Ā toĀ 2 December at 16:00
Register via the link in bio.
Policy momentum in the UK is setting the direction for a new era of sustainable construction rooted in measurable carbon performance. Planning reforms proposing the delivery of 1.5āÆmillion homes signal an urgent balance between rapid development and low carbon design. The debate now hinges on whether the next generation of housing can achieve net zero whole life carbon without compromising affordability or urban resilience. This shift underscores the necessity of whole life carbon assessment and lifecycle assessment across all stages of the built environment, from design to end-of-life reuse in construction.
The workforce transition is equally critical. SkillsāÆEnglandās forecast of 250,000 additional roles highlights that decarbonising the built environment demands not only policy innovation but also technical capability in sustainable building design, resource efficiency in construction and the specification of low embodied carbon materials. These skills will support the progression of carbon neutral construction and the integration of circular economy principles into procurement frameworks.
At the project level, the adoption of plugāin battery systems and renewable building materials demonstrates how energy-efficient buildings are becoming active participants in grid stability. This evolution reflects a deeper commitment to environmental sustainability in construction through eco-design for buildings and sustainable material specification that minimises the carbon footprint of construction.
Across Europe, climate accountability is tightening. Corporate emissions scrutiny and extreme weather events reinforce the imperative for green construction that measures embodied carbon in materials and validates performance through environmental product declarations (EPDs) and BREEAMāÆv7 certification. The convergence of sustainable design, circular construction strategies and life cycle cost analysis is making the environmental impact of construction transparent and quantifiable.
What was once an aspirational green agenda has become a framework for sustainable urban development guided by verifiable metrics of carbon footprint reduction and building lifecycle performance. The result is a global shift toward low impact, eco-friendly construction driven by evidence, regulation and innovation that embeds sustainability at the core of every design and decision.
Whole Life Carbon is a platform for the entire construction industryāboth 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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