Photo by Jen Osborne (www.jenosbornestudio.com) for @everydayclimatechange:
Jan 11, 2025. Brentwood, California, USA.
This is a scene from the Palisades fire in California. Firefighters from Washington State were shipped in to help fight this fire, which hit Brentwood, an area west of The Pacific Palisades. This day was known as the "fight for Mandeville Canyon," while firefighters and aerial assets made a huge attempt to stop the fire from spreading.
#Castaic #california #wildfire #climatechange #climatecrisis
A shift in sustainable construction is accelerating as low carbon design moves from concept to large‑scale adoption. Manufacturers are commercialising low carbon construction materials such as Holcim’s ready‑to‑use mortars, reducing the embodied carbon in materials and advancing circular economy in construction goals. The evolution of these renewable building materials marks an important step toward net zero whole life carbon strategies, where both operational and embodied carbon are measured through comprehensive whole life carbon assessment frameworks and lifecycle assessment techniques.
These developments also reinforce life cycle thinking in construction, supporting a circular economy that prioritises resource efficiency in construction and end‑of‑life reuse in construction. Digital transformation is redefining sustainable building design. Semantic modelling and digital twins are improving building lifecycle performance, enabling eco‑design for buildings that adapt proactively to environmental conditions. Such progress strengthens environmental sustainability in construction, where data‑driven insights help optimise energy‑efficient buildings and minimise the carbon footprint of construction projects.
Policy volatility continues to shape the trajectory of decarbonising the built environment. The UK government’s effort to disconnect gas and electricity pricing seeks to stabilise costs for long‑term low carbon building projects. Investment in clean and fusion energy offers new pathways for net zero carbon buildings, although integration into the grid and construction supply chains may take time. Maintaining carbon neutral construction outcomes will depend on consistent regulatory incentives aligned with whole life carbon objectives and sustainable material specification standards such as BREEAM and the forthcoming BREEAM V7.
Workplace change is influencing sustainable building practices. A recent Arup study indicates that flexible and remote working patterns could cut emissions by up to 90 per cent, transforming demand for green construction and low‑impact construction projects. These findings encourage designers and property managers to pursue sustainable urban development approaches, repurpose existing assets through eco‑friendly construction, and reduce the environmental impact of construction by embedding life cycle cost and lifecycle assessment at every stage of development.
The sector is entering an era where sustainable design must balance performance, longevity, and environmental responsibility. Net zero carbon targets are expanding from aspiration to delivery through integrated circular construction strategies, green building products, and comprehensive environmental product declarations (EPDs) that quantify the carbon footprint reduction achieved across the entire supply chain.
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