#OurPlanet is calling for help, and the good news is, we can answer!
The @europeancommission grants €233 million to support 1⃣2⃣ Strategic #LIFEProjects:
🌍 Environmental protection
🌦️ #ClimateAction
🐦 Nature & #EUBiodiversity preservation
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#LIFEProgramme
#EULife22
Decarbonising the built environment is shifting from voluntary ambition to regulatory requirement. The EU’s carbon border adjustment from 2026 will attach a measurable cost to embodied carbon in imported steel and cement, transforming it from an environmental disclosure into a central factor of life cycle cost. The UK is preparing similar policies, embedding whole life carbon assessment into procurement. Contractors and suppliers that can demonstrate low embodied carbon materials through verifiable environmental product declarations (EPDs) will gain a competitive advantage in tenders prioritising carbon footprint reduction and whole life carbon performance.
The move aligns with tightening ESG reporting frameworks demanding traceable data across the full building lifecycle. Firms will need digital systems capable of quantifying embodied carbon in materials, proving resource efficiency in construction, and linking design specifications to audited outputs. Whole life carbon data must now be integrated with cost modelling, reinforcing life cycle thinking in construction and binding sustainable building practices to financial strategy. Designers applying eco-design for buildings and sustainable material specification will help deliver carbon neutral construction compliant with emerging international standards such as BREEAM V7.
Project delivery is beginning to reflect these principles. TfL’s Colindale Station demonstrates low carbon design through mass timber structures and a blue‑green roof that supports green infrastructure and water resilience. The use of renewable building materials confirms that low carbon construction materials can perform under intensive civic use, supporting the shift toward sustainable construction and net zero whole life carbon targets. The project signifies that energy‑efficient buildings and eco‑friendly construction are no longer conceptual but operational realities of sustainable urban development.
Firms embedding circular economy in construction principles—such as end-of-life reuse in construction and circular construction strategies—will mitigate the environmental impact of construction while improving building lifecycle performance. The direction of policy and procurement is explicit: reduce the carbon footprint of construction through consistent lifecycle assessment, or face higher capital costs. Those integrating sustainable building design, circular economy approaches and low-impact construction to achieve net zero carbon buildings will secure resilience and market leadership.
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