November 2024 was the second-warmest November on record, with global...

EU Environment and Planet 1 year ago

November 2024 was the second-warmest November on record, with global temperatures a staggering 1.62°C above pre-industrial levels 🌡️ as shown by the latest @copernicusecmwf climate bulletin. This marks 16 out of the last 17 months where temperatures exceeded the 1.5°C, and this year is likely to be the first year where average temperatures exceed it on an annual basis. The signs couldn’t be clearer—our climate is heating up fast. 🌍 Climate action is more urgent than ever. We need to act fast and decisively for a sustainable future! For more info, link in bio 🔗

layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 3 hours ago



The UK’s first geothermal power plant marks a turning point in sustainable construction, transforming low‑carbon heat from concept to infrastructure. Its integration into sustainable building design will determine asset resilience and operational viability. Embedding connection‑ready plant rooms, low‑temperature systems and compatibility with net zero Whole Life Carbon targets is becoming essential. Projects limited to fossil‑based systems risk creating stranded assets as policy and tariffs accelerate the shift toward net zero carbon buildings.

A partnership between Forestry England and GB Energy aligns renewable energy generation with environmental sustainability in construction. Solar and wind installations within public woodland demonstrate how eco‑design for buildings can coexist with biodiversity safeguards, supporting grid stability for large developments. This model links Circular Economy principles with resource efficiency in construction, providing long‑term energy certainty for manufacturers and developers pursuing Whole Life Carbon Assessment across estates. Integrating green infrastructure and life cycle thinking in construction at planning stage is now a key differentiator for investors seeking predictable carbon footprint reduction and stable Life Cycle Cost outcomes.

In Wiltshire, a dome powered by landfill gas illustrates circular economy in construction at a micro scale. Its modular, closed‑loop engineering uses waste as a renewable building energy source, translating directly to low carbon design for industrial campuses and logistics hubs. Applying lifecycle assessment to unconventional resources illustrates how embodied carbon in materials and energy can be reduced through circular construction strategies and sustainable building practices. The project reinforces how brownfield regeneration aligned with low carbon construction materials and performance‑based procurement drives measurable carbon neutral construction outcomes.

The lesson for the industry is explicit: integrate Whole Life Carbon metrics, prioritise embodied carbon reduction and design for energy‑efficient buildings from concept stage. A Whole Life Carbon Assessment embedded within sustainable architecture and specification processes mitigates risk, optimises Life Cycle Cost and evidences environmental product declarations (EPDs) compliance. Teams capable of balancing net zero carbon performance with biodiversity objectives will lead decarbonising the built environment, shaping a new era of sustainable urban development founded on measurable environmental sustainability in construction.

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