Nature, ecosystems, and all life on Earth are all intertwined. Like dominoes - if one falls, the others fall as well.
Climate change, biodiversity loss, land degradation, desertification, and pollution are interconnected challenges.
The EU is participating in the 79th UN General Assembly #UNGA to strengthen international cooperation #ForOurPlanet and find multilateral solutions to global issues.
This year, the EU will also engage constructively and build bridges at other key multilateral events:
🇨🇴 #COP16Colombia
🇦🇿 COP29 on #ClimateChange
🇰🇷 Negotiations on a new legally binding treaty on plastic pollution
🇸🇦 COP16 on desertification in Saudi Arabia
The sustainable construction industry is confronting a period of recalibration as regulatory uncertainty, financial caution, and geopolitical volatility restrain tangible progress on decarbonising the built environment. The UK government’s proposed rollback of Biodiversity Net Gain regulations has generated strong opposition from environmental professionals who warn that undermining nature-based design contradicts sustainable building practices and impedes green construction. The debate reinforces that environmental sustainability in construction demands consistency across planning, delivery, and long-term ecological outcomes.
Growing mistrust of voluntary carbon markets has accelerated efforts to professionalise carbon accounting. The Institute for Sustainable Environmental Professionals (ISEP) has introduced a regulatory register to strengthen transparency in embodied carbon reporting and to ensure credible whole life carbon assessment. Robust lifecycle assessment and detailed measurement of embodied carbon in materials are fundamental for evaluating the carbon footprint of construction and achieving net zero whole life carbon performance across supply chains.
At Climate Week NYC, developers faced intensifying scrutiny over the feasibility of deep retrofit strategies for commercial real estate. Reducing emissions in buildings requires a full whole life carbon perspective, spanning design, materials, and operation. The discussion underscored that achieving net zero carbon buildings involves not only low carbon design and resource efficiency in construction but also innovative models of ownership, leasing, and procurement that prioritise sustainable building design and circular economy principles.
A recent UK economic analysis estimating losses of £183 billion due to continued fossil fuel dependence highlights the financial rationale for low embodied carbon materials, renewable building materials, and energy-efficient buildings. Investing in eco-friendly construction with long-term life cycle cost benefits supports both resilience and economic stability while promoting environmental product declarations (EPDs) and eco-design for buildings that align with circular economy in construction goals.
The sector’s transition to carbon neutral construction is advancing through more rigorous sustainable material specification, end-of-life reuse in construction, and circular construction strategies. Integrating whole life carbon thinking into every phase of sustainable building design remains critical to lowering the environmental impact of construction, achieving BREEAM and BREEAM V7 performance benchmarks, and driving measurable carbon footprint reduction across the global built environment.
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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