Our president and CEO Phyllis Cuttino spoke out powerfully at today’s @EPA...

Climate Reality 1 year ago

Our president and CEO Phyllis Cuttino spoke out powerfully at today’s @EPA public hearing, urging the agency to protect people, not polluters, by keeping strong limits on climate pollution from power plants. Repealing these standards would mean more climate pollution, more deadly health issues like asthma and heart disease, and more climate-fueled extreme disasters like wildfires and floods. These safeguards were designed to reduce emissions from power plants, one of the largest sources of climate pollution in the U.S. Rolling them back would be a reckless step backward. Phyllis said it best: “Please do all in your power to keep the current EPA power plant emissions standards in place. Our future depends upon it.” Take action. Tell @EPA to #LeadOnClimate to protect the people and planet by keeping these life-saving power plant standards in place. Link in bio for more info.

layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 10 hours ago



Britain’s construction sector faces structural transformation as the Climate Change Committee warns that the nation’s housing, workplaces, and infrastructure remain designed for a climate that no longer exists. The call for adaptation is now underpinned by policy momentum: the proposed Energy Independence Bill positions renewable generation and low carbon design as core to national security. This reframes sustainable construction as critical infrastructure rather than discretionary ambition, aligning with the drive toward net zero carbon and resilience in the built environment.

Across the industry, innovation in eco‑design for buildings and renewable building materials demonstrates measurable progress in reducing embodied carbon and improving whole life carbon performance. West Fraser’s CaberShield ECO flooring system reflects how low embodied carbon materials can meet conventional durability standards while supporting environmental sustainability in construction. The move toward circular economy principles and life cycle thinking in construction is reinforced by advanced digital modelling for whole life carbon assessment, generating data that informs retrofit strategies and life cycle cost optimisation.

Professional engagement is intensifying as institutions such as the RICS advocate collaboration to deliver net zero carbon buildings and end‑of‑life reuse in construction. Despite softening market conditions and reduced housing registrations, developers are being urged to adopt sustainable building practices that ensure long‑term building lifecycle performance and minimise the carbon footprint of construction.

Sustained funding, enforcement, and material innovation are essential to decarbonising the built environment. Achieving net zero whole life carbon will depend on integrating sustainable material specification, environmental product declarations (EPDs), and circular construction strategies into every phase of design and delivery. Britain’s green construction agenda will only succeed if sustainable building design evolves from aspiration to standard practice, ensuring that each low carbon building contributes to a resilient, energy‑efficient, and resource‑efficient future.

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