November is Native American Heritage Month, a time of recognition for the first...

Future Earth 2 years ago

November is Native American Heritage Month, a time of recognition for the first Americans. This month was declared in 1990 in the US, as an effort to honor the role of Native Americans in this country and in our lives, provide a platform for Native people to share their culture and traditions, and for non-native people to learn about Native American history and support their rights. A great place to start in learning about and supporting America’s indigenous peoples is learning about the land you are on, check out http://native-land.ca @nativelandnet for a map. Design by: @moniquezarbaf for @futureearth ; Quote from Commencement address for UC Berkeley’s College of Natural Resources class of 2005; Caption information sourced from firstnations.org @fndi303

layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 12 minutes ago



The Spring Statement offered limited direction on climate policy, prompting the construction sector to focus on technology, data, and measurable progress toward sustainable building design. Carbon capture and utilisation is advancing from laboratory stages to full-scale application, transforming CO₂ into low carbon construction materials. This innovation strengthens the case for green construction by supporting whole life carbon assessment and reducing embodied carbon in materials. Clients are demanding solutions aligned with net zero whole life carbon pathways and seeking life cycle cost benefits from renewable building materials and low embodied carbon materials.

AI-driven flexibility trials demonstrated that data centres can modulate energy loads dynamically, creating opportunities for energy-efficient buildings and grid‑interactive design. This form of environmental sustainability in construction supports low carbon design and integrates heat pumps and EV charging within constrained networks. Such grid management solutions contribute directly to decarbonising the built environment and the carbon footprint reduction of infrastructure projects.

In Europe, regulatory frameworks continue to emphasise lifecycle assessment and credible sustainability reporting. Even with reduced bureaucracy, the expectation for transparent environmental product declarations (EPDs) and reliable sustainability data persists. The circular economy in construction and whole life carbon metrics have become essential elements of sustainable building practices, ensuring clarity on both environmental impact of construction and building lifecycle performance throughout procurement.

The absence of strong policy direction from Westminster is leading the market to set its own standards. Contractors adopting sustainable material specification, eco-design for buildings, and circular construction strategies achieve competitive advantage through carbon neutral construction and long-term resource efficiency in construction. Those investing early in verifiable data, BREEAM V7 certification, and net zero carbon buildings secure access to finance aligned with sustainable construction and sustainable urban development objectives. The cost of inaction is rising; the future premium lies in demonstrable commitment to low-impact construction and lifecycle performance excellence.

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