Primary and old-growth forests are some of the EU's richest ecosystems...

EU Environment and Planet 2 years ago

Primary and old-growth forests are some of the EU's richest ecosystems 🌲 With their native trees preserved from human intervention, these forests are precious examples of our natural heritage. They also play a crucial role in our fight against climate change, provide essential ecosystem services, and offer refuge to endangered species. Sadly, these vital forest areas are becoming increasingly rare and fragmented in the EU. That is why we released comprehensive guidelines to define, map, monitor, and strictly protect all of the EU's remaining primary and old-growth forests. 🌳 👉 These guidelines are available in our link in bio. 🔗 #EUForests #ForNature #ForOurPlanet

layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 2 hours ago



A data-driven recalibration is reshaping sustainable construction as financial disclosure frameworks, material innovation and workforce realities redefine environmental accountability. Over 700 firms have adopted the Taskforce on Nature-related Financial Disclosures, extending scrutiny of nature risk into project pipelines. The move parallels global efforts to integrate biodiversity, resource efficiency in construction and whole life carbon assessment into performance reporting. The sector is beginning to treat environmental sustainability in construction as a material investment risk comparable to embodied carbon exposure.

The UK’s construction workforce shortage remains a critical constraint. With 14,000 training gaps in retrofit and modular fabrication, delivery of net zero carbon buildings and low carbon design targets is jeopardised. A skilled labour base is essential to implement circular economy in construction strategies, improve building lifecycle performance and expand eco-friendly construction practices that deliver measurable life cycle cost benefits.

Scottish policy direction under its revised Carbon Budget and Growth Delivery Plan introduces a measurable framework linking local infrastructure activity to carbon footprint reduction and verified sustainability metrics. Natural England’s focus on green infrastructure and nature-based solutions embeds sustainable building practices into national economic recovery planning. This signals that sustainable building design will be evaluated through lifecycle assessment and not rhetoric, making quantified environmental impact of construction a prerequisite for market credibility.

Despite ongoing promotion of low embodied carbon materials and renewable building materials, large-scale adoption remains limited. Investors and regulators expect verified evidence of circular construction strategies and end-of-life reuse in construction to achieve true carbon neutral construction and demonstrate decarbonising the built environment in action.

The modern benchmark for industry performance combines credible governance, transparent lifecycle data and equitable workforce transition. Sustainable design is becoming inseparable from compliance, aligning low carbon building aspirations with whole life carbon performance, embodied carbon in materials auditing and BREEAM v7 standards that define the future of green construction.

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