Researchers used an open-air forest lab near Zürich, Switzerland, to grow...

Inside Climate News 21 days ago

Researchers used an open-air forest lab near Zürich, Switzerland, to grow young oak and beech trees in rows of glass chambers. Conditions in some conditions tracked the natural environment, while others were warmed by nearly 5 degrees Celsius, with water regulated to simulate drought or normal conditions. Sensors and cameras tracked the leaves' temperatures throughout the summer while the scientists moved from tree to tree to measure how water flows through the leaf and how much strain they could tolerate. The cameras zoomed in on small patches of leaf surface to capture the exact moment they “scorched,” when green tissue suddenly turned brown. “They increased their thermal tolerance, but it was still not enough,” said Alyssa T. Kullberg, lead researcher. 🔗 Read more on our website, linked in our bio ✍️ @bberwyn 📸 Bob Erwyn

layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 11 hours ago



Regulatory reform and technological innovation are redefining sustainable construction in the UK and beyond. The Construction Products Reform White Paper is driving a fundamental shift towards environmental sustainability in construction, reshaping how manufacturers and specifiers approach embodied carbon in materials and whole life carbon assessment. These measures signal a decisive step towards net zero whole life carbon across the sector, compelling deeper lifecycle assessment and life cycle cost analysis as integral parts of sustainable building design.

The focus on embodied carbon reduction is prompting new supply chain transparency and widespread adoption of sustainable material specification. Guidance aligned with BREEAM and BREEAM v7 supports developers in embedding low carbon design, promoting resource efficiency in construction and encouraging greater use of renewable building materials verified through environmental product declarations (EPDs).

Retrofitting heritage buildings is increasingly guided by life cycle thinking in construction, revealing how eco-design for buildings can deliver both carbon footprint reduction and cultural preservation. Green building materials and low embodied carbon materials are connecting sustainable design with measurable building lifecycle performance.

Digital innovation is transforming verification of carbon offsetting and natural climate solutions. AI-supported tracking and data-driven environmental impact assessment are becoming critical to evaluating the carbon footprint of construction. Renewable energy integration and decentralised power solutions, including off‑grid fuel cells, are expanding the potential for energy-efficient buildings and low carbon building operations.

International policy pressure and investment models shaped by the circular economy are encouraging circular construction strategies and end-of-life reuse in construction. The global transition towards carbon neutral construction and net zero carbon buildings reinforces the urgency of decarbonising the built environment.

Collectively, these developments are redefining sustainable building practices and signalling a permanent transformation in how the industry addresses the environmental impact of construction — a shift guided by design innovation, life cycle optimisation, and uncompromising carbon accountability.

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